Evgenia Arbugaeva and her brother Maxim Arbugaev (pictured) spent three months filming in a remote hut with marine biologist Maxim Chakilev. "With so much footage, there were so many options, but at every stage of the edit we felt we needed to crystallise the story more," she explains. "The more we cut, the stronger and more focused it became." © Evgenia Arbugaeva
Canon Ambassador Evgenia Arbugaeva has had great success with still images. Her documentary work, which often focuses on isolated individuals in remote locations, has earned her accolades including a National Geographic Storytelling Fellowship and an Infinity Award from the International Center of Photography in New York.
However, for one particular project Evgenia decided photographs weren't enough to tell the full story. Instead, in collaboration with her brother, cinematographer Maxim Arbugaev, she made her first-ever film: a 25-minute documentary titled Haulout. Naturalistic and meditative, it focuses on the growing impact of climate change on the Arctic Ocean's walrus population.
Haulout was nominated for an Academy Award in the 2023 Best Documentary Short Film category and won accolades from both the American Film Institute and the International Documentary Association (IDA) – an extraordinary start to Evgenia's filmmaking career.