Anne de Carbuccia is an artist and filmmaker from Corsica, France.
Since 2013 she has traveled to the world’s most remote locations to artistically document endangered environments, species and cultures. The focus of her work is to move past the human-centered era of today.
She reflects on the new role that humans could play and imagines them leaving the center to join the circle, recognizing their power and fragility, as well as their interdependence. Her artwork explores how, using intelligence and technology, our species can become a positive force for our planet.

Her art has been exhibited in museums and public institutions throughout Europe and the United States. Her debut short film, One Ocean, was presented at the 75th Venice Film Festival in 2018 and is available in six languages. In 2023 her feature-length documentary, Earth Protectors on adaptation and the dangers of the Anthropocene was released on Apple TV and Amazon Prime.
This fall, her new series Choose Earth, filmed across a pivotal decade (2014 – 2024) will have its world premiere at the Rome Film Fest and its international premier at PÖFF. The series is an homage to cultural legacies, it wants to anthropologically document our era and to show the importance of societal change to move to a positive Anthropocene. It will be released on Amazon Prime on December 10th.
She is currently creating a mixed-media art series Stay Wild and a sculpture project Sergeant S.N.A.F.U. on the power of information and its use as an instrument of warfare.
She has established the One Planet One Future Foundation in the US and in Italy. Its mission is to raise awareness on climate breakdown and the dangers of the Anthropocene and to inspire individual and collective action through art, films and exhibitions.
Through the Foundation’s educational program, Anne has created a series of digital lessons and speaks at universities and institutions worldwide. She has been a featured speaker at the United Nations World Oceans Day conference and mentors programs for institutions such as the Guggenheim and IOC-UNESCO, which named her a role model for the Ocean Decade.
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