The film director and producer Cary Fukunaga opens worldwide until 30 January 2023 at Leica Gallery Madrid in Madrid (Calle Ortega y Gasset, 34) the exhibition of his own photographs in which he shows his perspective on the war in Ukraine, люта весна – Lost spring.
Likewise, the Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza in Madrid (Paseo del Prado, 8), will lend its auditorium today at 12 noon for a meet & greet with all the protagonists of the exhibition, in a meeting presented by Patricia Mateo, general director of Mateo&co and part of the board of World Central Kitchen España.
It will not only be an exhibition of photographs, but an immersive experience in which sound will play a major role. For the development of this initiative, Cary Fukunaga will have the support of José Bautista, sound artist who has created the immersive sound for the exhibition made from sounds captured in Ukraine during the filmmaker’s trip, and Joan Roig, a specialist in colour correction, who has worked side by side with the director to capture the essence of the colour he experienced in this country.
The photographs will be on sale to benefit World Central Kitchen, the NGO headed by the chef José Andrés, which has been delivering food to people displaced by the conflict in Ukraine since the beginning of the conflict on the Polish border, where it has been for the last nine months.
The Californian director is well known for his recent work on 2021 as director and executive producer of the latest 007 film: No time to die. But also for other feature films such as Sin nombre (2009), winner of the Best Director Award at the Sundance Film Festival and Best New Director Award at the Edinburgh International Film Festival, and Jane Eyre (2011), for which he was nominated for a Goya for Best European Film. Titles that form part of his long career with the development of short films, documentaries and TV series, such as True Detective.