Visible bodies / hidden systems
Cruelty did not disappear.
It became easier
not to see.
This campaign speaks through horses, dogs, cats and birds because they are close enough for us to recognize their presence. But they are not the whole story. Behind them are many other living bodies still placed inside systems of omission, distance and hidden cruelty.
Animal cruelty is not only an isolated act of violence. It is also a structure of invisibility: animals transported, confined, abandoned, overused, neglected or reduced to numbers. Awareness has grown, but recent global reports show that suffering remains present, measurable and unresolved.
The campaign does not use animals as decoration. It uses their presence to point at what is often hidden: systems where care is delayed, diluted or forgotten.
The long-term global curve of farmed land animals slaughtered continues to rise. The issue is not distant: it is structural, repeated and measured at global scale.
Source: Our World in Data / FAO, updated 2025 Factory systems 94B yearsThe Factory Farming Index estimates a massive annual loss of healthy life for factory-farmed chickens, pigs and cattle, turning suffering into an industrial condition.
Source: World Animal Protection Factory Farming Index, 2025 Animal health Global reportWOAH’s first State of the World’s Animal Health report frames animal health and welfare as part of a wider global system: climate, disease, food, public health and resilience.
Source: WOAH State of the World’s Animal Health, 2025 Policy movement 70+ NGOsGlobal animal-welfare organizations continue pushing animal welfare into international health, food and environmental agendas, while stressing that progress still needs implementation.
Source: World Federation for Animals, 2025The conversation has moved. Animal welfare is increasingly present in global health, food-system, climate and policy discussions.
The systems that hide suffering have not disappeared. Scale, confinement, abandonment and neglect continue to make many lives invisible.
Care begins when distance ends. To look again is to refuse the systems that turn living bodies into silence.