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corpo à luz

corpo à luz is a moving portrait of photographic artist Cecilia Sordi Campos.

 

The film positions Cecilia's autobiographical practice, which explores her migrant and female experiences, into the context of making work that is both political and cathartic.

 

With this collaboration, we hope to have a role in contributing to public discourses centred on the underrepresentation of infertility issues by offering Cecilia's personal perspective on the shared experience of womanhood and all its nuances.

Angus Scott

Angus Scott is a lens-based artist and visual media professional living and working on Wurundjeri country in Melbourne, Australia.

 

Working with both still and moving image, Angus’ creative practice is anchored in land and culture; the overlapping influences of where we live and who we are. Informed by familial narratives, national myths and connection to landscape, his work oscillates between poetic and observational forms of documentary storytelling.

In 2021, Angus was the recipient of the inaugural OD Prize for his body of work Teetering like a September myth. The project was then exhibited in London as part of the winter program by Open Doors Gallery. In the same year, Angus also exhibited his video installation, Do Brumbies Dream in Red? in Melbourne. Formed in collaboration with Tom Goldner, the two channel large-format projection work was the culmination of two years spent documenting the climate crisis in Australia, from the politically charged coal mining regions of Central QLD to the fire ravaged landscapes of the NSW Snowy Mountains and Victorian High Country. Angus’ debut monograph, Teetering like a September myth was released in 2022.

As an co-Creative Director for Photo Collective, Angus spends his days immersed in Australian photography with a strong focus on visual narrative. Angus manages the production of written content, produces short films and puts together publications such as Photo Collective Magazine. He also sit on the judging committee for the series-based annual award Stories and the annual Australian Photography Awards.

Cecilia is a Brazilian born, Australia based photographic artist and writer.


Her practice is positioned in the field of socially-engaged art and expanded photography. Cecilia’s projects place value on ‘narratives of the self’ as resources for creating effective visual vocabularies to represent complex psychological experiences of being-ness, relationship dynamics, womanhood and the female body, migration and identity. The aim of the projects is the seeking of strategies in the communication of these experiences within a public discourse.

Cecilia is currently a PhD candidate at RMIT University and has a Bachelor of Arts (Photography) with First Class Honours. She is a resident of the inaugural Photo Vogue x Voice NFT residency and her work was shown at Photo Vogue 2022 in Milan alongside the other residents. She has also shown in Arles as part of the OpenWalls Arles 2021 Awards, to which she was awarded Best Moving Image; at the PhMuseum Days 2021 in Bologna, Italy, and Head On Photo Festival in Australia, amongst others.

 

Her first self-published book Tem Bigato Nessa Goiaba has been awarded a Commendation at the Australia and New Zealand Photobook Awards in 2019 and won the Momento Pro Best Book Design at the 2019 CCP Salon. The project at large has also been awarded a Main Prize Honourable Mention at the PhMuseum Women Photographers Grant in 2019. Her work has been featured in Fisheye Magazine, GUP Magazine, Paper Journal Magazine, Der Greif, British Journal of Photography and other publications.

Cecilia Sordi Campos

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