FILM THE WORLD
an initiative by PHotoESPAÑA and Chapka
Can a single image hold an entire journey?
Can it transform what we see into what we feel?
Understanding travel as an experience capable of transforming the way we look at the world is part of who we are.
That is why we collaborate with PHotoESPAÑA, Spain’s most renowned international festival of photography and visual arts — a space where the image becomes a way of interpreting the world.

Travel is also a way of seeing.
At Chapka, we believe travel goes far beyond movement from one place to another.
It is a time for observation, discovery and storytelling.
A space where our gaze expands and the everyday takes on new meaning.
That is why we take a step further into this shared territory with contemporary creation.
Together with PHotoESPAÑA, we promote a cultural initiative driven by a clear purpose:
to celebrate creativity, talent, and photography as a way of interpreting the world.
A collaboration with PHotoESPAÑA: Film the World
PHotoESPAÑA is one of the world’s leading international festivals of photography and visual arts, with over 25 years of history and a key reference point in the dissemination of photographic creation from the last century.
Film the World emerges as a shared commitment to a contemporary way of seeing.
A project that invites us to explore travel from a personal, creative and authorial perspective, through an open photography call that encourages new ways of telling the world through images.
The initiative opens a space to share travel photography from a different, creative point of view — revealing the complexity and richness of other cultures through a contemporary sensitivity.
Because if there is one thing we share with PHotoESPAÑA, it is this way of understanding the world:
open, alive, and in constant movement.
Because travelling is not just about visiting a new place.
It is about learning to look differently.
And that is exactly where we want to be.
More details coming very soon.
Title: Nomadic Constellations, Kyrgyzstan
Photographic credit: @entre2poles
