The Condor & The Bull

This project, The Condor & The Bull, examines the rich culture of the Indigenous Quechua people from the Andes Mountains. Facing challenges from globalization and climate change, the Quechua struggle to maintain their way of life as resource demands increase. The project aims to explore their current experiences and how their resilience helps protect their culture and the land that sustains them. A more in-depth description is available at the bottom of this gallery.

I am proud to announce this project was recently recognized by the International Photography Awards in three different categories, and by the Tokyo International Foto Awards in five different categories.

The Condor & The Bull has also been selected to be a participating project at Review Santa Fe 2025. 

The Condor & The Bull (Continued)

A procession of Indigenous villagers emerges from Peru’s Andes Mountains like beacons in the dawn. It’s the first morning of Qoyllur Rit’i (the Festival of the Snow Star), held when the Pleiades constellation returns to the equatorial sky. Thousands of Quechua-speaking peoples have made an arduous pilgrimage 5,000 meters high to honour the Apus (sacred spirits of the mountains), the arrival of the harvest season, and, these days, Jesus Christ. 

Ukukus (the half-man, half-bear guardians of Andean culture and tradition)  haul heavy, wooden crosses up to the glaciers they protect. Others dressed like black-and-white birds oversee the festivities from the clifftops. They represent the Andean condor—the symbol of the Quechua people, still fighting for their freedom under Spanish reign.

Qoyllur Rit’i is a syncretic event: Catholic imagery and national flags intermix with traditional tassels, feathers, and flutes that shake and whistle in a three-day trance. It’s an example of Indigenous survival and adaptation—resistance and coexistence—through 500 years of colonization, which inspired Canadian photographer Michael Bednar to move to Peru and immerse himself in the culture to document. 

Over the past two years, Bednar has withstood arrest, threats of violence and risk of deportation to witness this resilience, along with lasting customs that demonstrate what it means to be Quechua today. In the Yawar (“Blood”) Fiesta, banned in 2015, a rodeo-like event culminated with a live death match between a condor and a bull: that symbol of the Andean people literally strapped to the back of their Spanish rulers.

Today, Quechua culture is alive and strong, but traditions like Yawar are dying out, and the Quechua language—which once united the Inca Empire from modern-day Colombia to northern Argentina—has shrunk to small pockets. Now with globalization, urbanization, climate change, and an ever-growing demand for resources, the Quechua are facing their greatest threats yet in a rapidly changing world. 

This is a story of brutality and beauty. Clashes and coexistence. And an indomitable spirit that has the power to protect people and culture, and the land that gives life to both. The Quechua, like Indigenous peoples around the globe, are fighting for their cultures, reclaiming their pride and their rightful place on our planet.

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