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The

Artist

Walter Costa

Nominated in
2022
By
Fotodok
Lives and Works in

After studying aeronautics in Italy, Walter Costa realised that the pilot career was less “romantic” than he thought. In 2009, while completing a degree in Politics and International Studies at Complutense University in Madrid, he started attending photography courses at Blank Paper school, where he also got involved in publications and editing. Studying their postgraduate programme in documentary photography gave him the opportunity to start merging image-making with his interest in visually investigating social issues in relation to power imbalances. Love and curiosity made him move to São Paulo in 2013, where besides working as a news and commercial photographer he started teaching editing and bookmaking while collaborating with several Brazilian and international authors in the development and editing of their photobook projects. In 2017 Costa founded Havaiana Papers, a distribution platform aimed at improving the circulation of Brazilian photobooks. As a curator, he was invited to organize a series of performatic lectures about photobooks for SOLAR Fotofestival (Fortaleza, BR) in December 2018 and was the guest curator of the sixth edition of En CMYK-Photobook Meeting organized by the Montevideo Center of Photography (UY) in March 2019. In 2018 Costa came back to Europe to join the first cohort of the MA Photography&Society at KABK/Royal Academy of Art in The Hague. With the aim of researching, discussing and finding new ways to use photography as a tool for public debate, he completed the program with a wider and more multi-disciplinary practice. In 2020-2021, the artist took part in FOTODOK’s talent support programme Lighthouse. Still based in The Netherlands, Costa keeps editing photobook projects while teaching at KABK and developing his personal projects.

Projects

Autolykos Collection

Autolykos Collection (ongoing) by Walter Costa is a research-based project that visually investigates the looting and online trafficking of archaeological artefacts, a growing transnational crime that, by bartering the traces of our ancestors for profit, contributes to the very destruction of material culture, sacrificing history and public access in favour of commodification and private ownership.

Treasure hunters, smugglers and avid collectors of ancient artefacts have been active since forever, but it’s the appearance of social media that eased and boosted their activities and interactions, as well as the infiltration of armed groups in the business. On Facebook they found a parallel world where setting up such an illegal marketplace is possible, hardly scrutinised and highly profitable.

Focusing on Middle Eastern and North African antiquities illicitly excavated and then sold through private Facebook groups, Autolykos Collection exploits the social platform's archiving of users' "digital artefacts", highlighting the role of photography in facilitating but also revealing the illicit supply chain which perpetuates the colonialist siphoning of cultural heritage from the global South to the global North.

The project also exposes Facebook as an invaluable collaborative learning platform for looters: thanks to numerous specialised groups, they help each other by sharing illustrated tutorials on site spotting and (very destructive) excavation techniques, information on the artefacts most sought after by Western collectors, valuations of artefacts, contacts of traffickers. Nevertheless, looters remain the weakest link in the value chain, which continues to secure the highest profits and lowest risks at the other end of the trafficking and laundering networks.

With the “gentlemen's right to anonymity” shrouding most transactions in the high-end art market with secrecy, it is relatively easy for reckless dealers to introduce looted antiquities into the open trade. After passing through laundering processes that can take years to fabricate false provenances, these artefacts end up resurfacing in galleries, auction houses and private collections. As they look no different from antiquities of legitimate origin, the only way to spot them is to have (visual) evidence of their connection to the trafficking.

Autolykos Collection renders this ongoing loss of material culture visible and tangible by appropriating photographs of artefacts for sale published by looters and traffickers, thus gathering the only visual evidence of the existence of these otherwise unknown antiquities. Then, through 3D modelling and printing, this growing database of images of missing artefacts regains three-dimensionality, generating a collection of physical objects.

These 3D “provisional originals” created from low-resolution photos of looted antiquities incorporate the missing faces and lack of detail of the images. In this way, they materialise the consequences that these criminal activities facilitated by online communication have on the physical realm and ultimately on history, while directly affecting the criminal actors by exposing evidence of their looting.

These tangible reconstructions are “provisional” because there is hope that the missing artefacts will resurface in years to come, “originals” because for now -or forever in case the authentic remains missing- they become the only way to admire the artworks, similar to enjoying Roman copies of long-lost Greek originals.

In Greek mythology, Autolykos was the “king of thieves” because of his ability to become invisible and hide his loot. With social media, these “superpowers” are now just a click away. While exposing how the transience of digital data is jeopardising the very existence of material culture, Autolykos Collection is the first initiative to apply digital reconstruction technologies to cultural heritage that is not threatened by natural disasters or conflicts, but by the destructive forces of commodification in the globalised marketplace.

Walter Costa
was nominated by
Fotodok
in
2022
Show all projects
Each year every member of the FUTURES European Photography Platform nominates a set of artists and projects to become part of the FUTURES network.

Peggy Van Mosselaar’s practice circulates around the subjects of identity, mental health and care of the elderly people. She is a participating artist in FOTODOK's most recent exhibition Part of Me… Shaping Mental Spaces. The Tali Pusat project is a vulnerable and multilayered story about her mother, revealing how migration and colonial histories can influence one's personal life.

Pablo Lerma participated in an earlier exhibition at FOTODOK: Pass It On. Private Stories, Public Histories. Since then, we've collaborated on many levels. Often using archives at his starting point, Lerma's practice researches the concept of masculinity, investigating the lack of representation of gay men and the queer community throughout photographic history.

Walter Costa took part in FOTODOK’s Lighthouse talent program as a graduate from one of the Netherlands's many art academies. Trained as a pilot, the artist later landed in the field of photography; Costa's Autolykos Collection project is a visual investigation of 'the looting and online trafficking of archeological artefacts - a growing transnational crime'.

Giya Makondo-Wills is a British-South African documentary photographer based in Utrecht, where she moved a few years ago. Her oeuvre explores race, colonialism and systems of power. With Boarderliners, Makondo-Wills employed portraiture to consider what it means to be mixed race in the UK, collecting the stories of people she photographed.

Thana Faroe's project, How Shall We Greet The Sun, charts the personal stories of young women living in the Netherlands. Many of these women, including the artist, must (re)construct their identities, bringing their heritage and memories to new cultural and political contexts. Faroq is also nominated by Der Greif.

FOTODOK values projects that are rooted in the living experiences of their makers. The works we highlight reflect photography's ability to reveal what might otherwise be invisible: be it the representation of queer families in (historical) archives; the emotional landscape of refugee women; the illegal antique art market; or the impact of enduring colonial power structures.