An Imagined Earth

Imagining transformations towards better futures

I’ve been an admirer of Chris Jordan’s digital photographic art for several years now. His Running the Numbers series paints an unflattering portrait of American and global consumer culture that presents environmental messages in a fresh light. He creates images using repetition of familiar consumer items and waste, typically with an ironic twist. For example, below is his work ‘Whale‘ from 2011.

Whale, 2011 by Chris Jordan
Whale, 2011 by Chris Jordan

What at first glance seems to be a nice picture of a whale turns out to be something more sinister. The work is constructed (digitally) from 50,000 plastic bags, equal to the estimated number of pieces of floating plastic in every square mile in the world’s oceans. The website allows you to zoom in to see the individual plastic bags, as shown in the view below of the whale’s eye. It’s a sad indictment on the state of the Earth’s oceans.

Whale, 2011, detail by Chris Jordan
Whale, 2011, detail by Chris Jordan

On Midway Atoll, a remote cluster of islands more than 2000 miles from the nearest continent, the detritus of our mass consumption surfaces in an astonishing place: inside the stomachs of thousands of dead baby albatrosses. The nesting chicks are fed lethal quantities of plastic by their parents, who mistake the floating trash for food as they forage over the vast polluted Pacific Ocean.

For me, kneeling over their carcasses is like looking into a macabre mirror. These birds reflect back an appallingly emblematic result of the collective trance of our consumerism and runaway industrial growth. Like the albatross, we first-world humans find ourselves lacking the ability to discern anymore what is nourishing from what is toxic to our lives and our spirits. Choked to death on our waste, the mythical albatross calls upon us to recognize that our greatest challenge lies not out there, but in here.

~ Chris Jordan, Seattle, February 2011

In 2009, Jordan began travelling to Midway Atoll, in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, 2,000 miles from the nearest continent. What he found and photographed there is sickening. Inside the stomachs of dead baby albatrosses he found deadly plastic waste from human civilisation that had found its way even to this remote place.

The photographs he took are macabre and disturbing. These intimate portraits of death by plastic are strangely beautiful, yet behind each photograph is a story of pain and suffering that tears at your heart. I’ve included a selection of his photographs below.

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Jordan is currently working on a film about his experiences on the island, called Midway. The trailer is below. I find it even more haunting than the images, because it shows the pain that lies unspoken in the photographs. If anyone ever doubts the impact that humans have on the Earth, show them this trailer and these images. Our civilisation brings death even to this remote part of the globe. We must find new ways to live with our beautiful planet that work with the Earth’s systems, not against them. For some people, this artwork will bring that message home more powerfully than words ever can.


11 responses to “Chris Jordan’s message from the gyre”

  1. D. A. Hartley Avatar

    Reblogged this on Friend Nature and commented:
    I am reposting this from Planet Centric, a wonderful article about Chris Jordan, and his film, Midway.

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  2. jacscottstudio Avatar
    jacscottstudio

    Friends sent me this haunting film – delighted you rate it too – poignant and poetic

    Like

  3. PK Read Avatar

    Great post on a great (albeit depressing) film and artwork. Thanks!

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  4. Chris Jordan’s Portraits of American Mass Consumption | Tim Batchelder.com Avatar

    […] Chris Jordan’s message from the gyre (chrisriedy.me) […]

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  5. Midway: Chris Jordan’s TrashTalk (Part 1) | art predator Avatar

    […] Chris Jordan’s message from the gyre (chrisriedy.me) […]

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  6. beat maker for mac Avatar

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  7. […] Running the Numbers II. Chris Jordan is a digital photographic artist. The piece below entitled ‘Whale’ does looks like one from a distance but upon closer inspection you’ll find that it’s actually created digitally from 50,000 plastic bags that represent the number of floating plastic found in the world’s ocean. This is just one of the examples in his series that portrays the massive consumption of human culture. (Image Source: chrisriedy.me) […]

    Like

  8. […] Running the Numbers II. Chris Jordan is a digital photographic artist. The piece below entitled ‘Whale’ does looks like one from a distance but upon closer inspection you’ll find that it’s actually created digitally from 50,000 plastic bags that represent the number of floating plastic found in the world’s ocean. This is just one of the examples in his series that portrays the massive consumption of human culture. (Image Source: chrisriedy.me) […]

    Like

  9. micsmithgeographic Avatar

    Reblogged this on Mic Smith Geographic and commented:
    I’m interested in the fact that albatros are like shearwaters – picking up plastic instead of small fish in their quick skimming feeding style.

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  10. Giselle Wilkinson - 4allsentientbeings Avatar
    Giselle Wilkinson – 4allsentientbeings

    Reblogged this on Giselle Wilkinson and commented:
    Chris Jordan has immersed himself in this work and found deep spaces of grief there. He shares this with us through Midway. He speaks these days of grief being a portal, a trapdoor, through which we can fall into an ocean of love. He shares this with us too.
    Chris Reidy has well described this important work and I am reblogging what he has said because I believe the dire situation is absolutely current and it needs our conscious grief, our unflagging love and our determined, undaunted action. Plastic pollution must – and can – be stopped at the source.

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