



1 / 10 Chevron Chevron FARC headquarters, during failed negotiations. Signs in background portray founders of the FARC, Jacobo Arenas and Manuel Marulanda. Los Pozos, Caquetá. September 5, 2000.

For the past ten years, the photographer Stephen Ferry has working on what he calls a “collective photographic record of the Colombian conflict.” The long-running internal unrest in Colombia, he warns, isn’t just a product of the drug wars, but “involves a baffling array of actors: The Colombian Armed Forces, supported by the United States, two guerrilla armies, and a host of right-wing paramilitary militias and criminal gangs.” Ferry’s project, which brings historical information and images together with his own landscapes of Colombia and portraits of its people, is currently on display at Umbrage gallery, and will be the focus of his upcoming book, “Violentology.” Here’s a look at Ferry’s photographs.

All photographs courtesy Stephen Ferry and Umbrage.