Landscapes of the late Anthropocene
Landscapes of the late Anthropocene
About this book
"Due to a general public concern about climate change, most people have become aware of the term anthropocene. It's a word relating to or denoting the current geological age, viewed as the period during which human activity has been the dominant influence on climate and the environment. For the last two years I have been thinking about a way to make a new artists' book related to the issues that prompted that term anthropocene. y son, Nick, an urban planner and GIS professional, had been researching changes in global sea-level projections as modeled by NASA, NOAA, and other agencies. The infographic visualizations that were used to show sea-rise levels over the next one hundred years were unbelievably scary, and much worse than the figures often cited in the newspapers and normal media channels. These figures show an eventual rise, with all polar caps and glaciers completely melted, of over two hundred feet! An article in the just published July 2017 issue of the National Geographic Magazine, entitled Antartica is Melting, and Giant Ice Cracks Are Just the Start is very scary. When I thought of a sea level rise of two hundred feet and what that could mean in terms of our cities and our society, the future seemed incredibly bleak. For the landscapes in the book, I decided to create a dystopian set of images that hinted at a future watery world, one where the remnants of civilizations lived in armed and guarded towers, growing their food in vertical farms inside these towers. The rest of the world population would have mostly died off. Marauding remnants exist in small groups that would try to gain entrance into these armed tower structures. The backgrounds of these images were built using scans of steel engravings from several 19th century books. I used photos of water and waves to make the foregrounds. I have long been interested in airport control towers and have many photos of them around the world. They seemed to me like the modern version of towers on medieval castles. Using a web app by the programmer Evan Wallace, called webgl-filter, I changed the airport control tower photos into dithered images that looked more like the background steel engravings. The assembly and coloration of the images was done in Photoshop. The goal was to create a series of images of a forbidding and lonely watery world, one that was austerely beautiful but scary and thought-provoking..." --From the introductory booklet.
Details
- OL Work ID
- OL44858765W
Subjects
Global warming in artClimatic changesPictorial worksWater in artFloods in artSea levelClimatic factorsArtists' booksSpecimens