Born in France in 1977, Eloisa pursued classical studies in Turin and Paris.
She attended the faculty of Literature and Philosophy at the University of Seville and Turin, where she earned a degree in Visual Anthropology with a thesis focusing on the lives of indigenous people in Mato Grosso.
In 2001, she completed internships at Magnum Photos in Paris and at Vu agency as a photo-editor for international press, working on the book “Open Wound: Chechnya 1994-2003” by Stanley Green for Trolley Books. Upon returning to Italy, she co-founded one of the pioneering groups of young photographers called “Donquixote.”
As a freelance photojournalist, she has covered global events, including the IDP crisis in Colombia, the Crimean referendum, and Israel’s military operation “Protective Edge” in the Gaza Strip in 2014.
In 2015, with the support of the EJC, she produced two reportages on India and the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) on the subject of sanitation.
In 2016, she worked in La Guajira, Colombia, on a reportage about global warming and mining issues, as well as the indigenous responses to these challenges, thanks to a Fellowship by the International Women’s Media Foundation.
She now lives in Barcelona, where she is involved in various projects related to communicating the issue of climate change. Her work has been published in numerous magazines such as Internazionale, La Stampa, Repubblica, L’Europeo, Il Fatto Quotidiano, Il Sole 24 Ore, La Vanguardia, GEO, New York Magazine, The Guardian, El Pais, and Die Zeit.
She attended the faculty of Literature and Philosophy at the University of Seville and Turin, where she earned a degree in Visual Anthropology with a thesis focusing on the lives of indigenous people in Mato Grosso.
In 2001, she completed internships at Magnum Photos in Paris and at Vu agency as a photo-editor for international press, working on the book “Open Wound: Chechnya 1994-2003” by Stanley Green for Trolley Books. Upon returning to Italy, she co-founded one of the pioneering groups of young photographers called “Donquixote.”
As a freelance photojournalist, she has covered global events, including the IDP crisis in Colombia, the Crimean referendum, and Israel’s military operation “Protective Edge” in the Gaza Strip in 2014.
In 2015, with the support of the EJC, she produced two reportages on India and the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) on the subject of sanitation.
In 2016, she worked in La Guajira, Colombia, on a reportage about global warming and mining issues, as well as the indigenous responses to these challenges, thanks to a Fellowship by the International Women’s Media Foundation.
She now lives in Barcelona, where she is involved in various projects related to communicating the issue of climate change. Her work has been published in numerous magazines such as Internazionale, La Stampa, Repubblica, L’Europeo, Il Fatto Quotidiano, Il Sole 24 Ore, La Vanguardia, GEO, New York Magazine, The Guardian, El Pais, and Die Zeit.