On "March 24 at 9:00 PM", Lab27 will host, as part of its socially oriented programming and in connection with the exhibition "Scavando si impara. The Peruvian Lesson", a talk with artist Stefano Sbrulli and Flaviano Bianchini, founder of Source International. The event will be streamed live on Lab27’s YouTube channel.
We return to South America to examine the impact of the extractive industry on local communities in Peru, reflecting on the exploitation of indigenous lands and the poisoning of communities. Stefano Sbrulli will speak about the project he has been working on over the past four years in Cerro de Pasco, considered one of the most polluted cities in the world. He will also give an exclusive preview of his documentary film "Donde los niños no sueñan", scheduled for release in 2022.
With Flaviano Bianchini, we will trace Source International’s commitment since 2008 to conducting studies and working with community members to expose the severe health and environmental consequences of mining, and to defend the human rights of affected communities.
Stefano Sbrulli
Italy-based visual artist whose work combines video, photography, and graphics, focusing primarily on social and environmental issues. He has covered stories in Italy, Iraq, Mozambique, Serbia, and Bosnia-Herzegovina. Over the past four years, he has addressed the consequences of mining activities in Peru, producing his first medium-length film, "Donde los niños no sueñan", set in the city of Cerro de Pasco. He has collaborated with UNDP and UNHCR and currently serves as Visual Content Manager for the NGO Source International. His work has been published by BBC, El PaÃs, Die Zeit, La Repubblica, Internazionale, L’Espresso, NatGeo Italia, Huffington Post, Artribune, LifeGate, and Perimeter. Co-founder of B Studio.
Flaviano Bianchini
Italian environmentalist and human rights activist. He founded and leads Source International, an NGO that defends indigenous communities against exploitation and abuse by multinational extractive companies. His latest book is "Migrantes. Clandestino verso il sogno americano" (Bfs Edizioni, 2015), which recounts, from a first-person perspective, the journeys of Latin American migrants to the United States.

On "March 24 at 9:00 PM", Lab27 will host, as part of its socially oriented programming and in connection with the exhibition "Scavando si impara. The Peruvian Lesson", a talk with artist Stefano Sbrulli and Flaviano Bianchini, founder of Source International. The event will be streamed live on Lab27’s YouTube channel.
We return to South America to examine the impact of the extractive industry on local communities in Peru, reflecting on the exploitation of indigenous lands and the poisoning of communities. Stefano Sbrulli will speak about the project he has been working on over the past four years in Cerro de Pasco, considered one of the most polluted cities in the world. He will also give an exclusive preview of his documentary film "Donde los niños no sueñan", scheduled for release in 2022.
With Flaviano Bianchini, we will trace Source International’s commitment since 2008 to conducting studies and working with community members to expose the severe health and environmental consequences of mining, and to defend the human rights of affected communities.
Stefano Sbrulli
Italy-based visual artist whose work combines video, photography, and graphics, focusing primarily on social and environmental issues. He has covered stories in Italy, Iraq, Mozambique, Serbia, and Bosnia-Herzegovina. Over the past four years, he has addressed the consequences of mining activities in Peru, producing his first medium-length film, "Donde los niños no sueñan", set in the city of Cerro de Pasco. He has collaborated with UNDP and UNHCR and currently serves as Visual Content Manager for the NGO Source International. His work has been published by BBC, El PaÃs, Die Zeit, La Repubblica, Internazionale, L’Espresso, NatGeo Italia, Huffington Post, Artribune, LifeGate, and Perimeter. Co-founder of B Studio.
Flaviano Bianchini
Italian environmentalist and human rights activist. He founded and leads Source International, an NGO that defends indigenous communities against exploitation and abuse by multinational extractive companies. His latest book is "Migrantes. Clandestino verso il sogno americano" (Bfs Edizioni, 2015), which recounts, from a first-person perspective, the journeys of Latin American migrants to the United States.
