In 2016, Siciliano started volunteering his time and camera to
Fundacion Colibri, a Caracas-based NGO working to provide basic medication and tools to children’s hospitals. His photographs of the hospitals are a damning indictment of the state of public services in Venezuela. He also produced a series of videos with
Venezolanas en Accion that denounced human rights violations against women. “I wanted to document issues like hunger, poverty, and violence and show how they tie and feed into the protests.”
Siciliano’s experiences during the protests led him to get involved with
Sin Mordaza, an NGO that defends freedom of expression and that has become a symbol of protests against the Venezuelan government. Sin Mordaza focuses on peaceful protest through art and organizes comedy productions, open calls for art, and political cartoon compilations, among other initiatives. Siciliano is collaborating with Sin Mordaza to put together an international photography exhibit titled “120 Days of Protest” that will not only focus on the protests, but also their causes, such as hunger, poverty, and violence. Even though he is currently safe in Spain, Siciliano admits that he chose to not publish some of these images in Venezuela out of fear that they may bring consequences to family and friends back home.
When asked about the future, Siciliano said that he hopes to use his civil engineering degree while continuing with photography. “I love my career and what I studied, and I love the power of communication that photography has. In terms of going back, who doesn’t want to go back home, however hurt and shaken it is? I don’t want to do it now and end up in a cell, but I do feel a responsibility to return and show things as they are.”
By Laura Kauer García, February 2018. Laura is the Artists at Risk Connection (ARC) Coordinator.