10 Stunning Images Show Human’s Huge Impact on the Earth

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Over the course of human history, man’s ongoing destruction of the environment has forever altered our natural surroundings.

Proof of humanity’s devastating footprint on Earth can be seen in these stunning images below, graciously provided to EcoWatch by the organizers of FotoFest, an internationally known photographic arts and learning nonprofit based in Houston, Texas.

Unaltered Stomach Contents of a Laysan Albatross Fledgling, Midway Island, 2010
. From the series Midway: Message from the Gyre, 2009 - 2016
Photo credit: Courtesy of the artist Chris Jordan

Unaltered Stomach Contents of a Laysan Albatross Fledgling, Midway Island, 2010
. From the series Midway: Message from the Gyre, 2009 – 2016. 
Photo credit: Courtesy of the artist Chris Jordan

FotoFest is hosting their 2016 Biennial, a citywide exhibition which runs March 11 through April 24 under the theme “Changing Circumstances: Looking at the Future of the Planet.”

The exhibition will address all the major aspects of anthropocene—or, broadly, the age of man. In these photos, you’ll see marine debris and ocean plastics that have choked our waterways and aquatic life; how mining and drilling for Earth’s precious resources has destroyed our landscape and spewed emissions that warm the atmosphere and melt glaciers; and how mountains of trash are left to rot in ever-growing landfills.


SOUP: Refused, 2011
Ingredient: plastic oceanic debris affected by the chewing and attempted injestion by animals. Includes a toothpaste tube. Photo credit: 
Courtesy of the artist Mandy Barker
SOUP: Refused, 2011. 
Ingredient: plastic oceanic debris affected by the chewing and attempted injestion by animals. Includes a toothpaste tube. Photo credit: 
Courtesy of the artist Mandy Barker

The exhibition is a collaboration between FotoFest co-founders Wendy Watriss and Fred Baldwin and FotoFest executive director Steven Evans. Watriss and Baldwin have been developing the concept for the past five years and Evans wanted make it the focus of the FotoFest 2016 Biennial.

“After many years of doing environmental programming at FotoFest for over 20 years and recent discussions with many scientists, policy-makers and artists across the world, we thought it was to take a new approach to ‘looking at’ the relationship of human society to the Earth,” Watriss told EcoWatch.

“The work selected by FotoFest for this 2016 Biennial looks at the beauty and diversity of life on Earth alongside the imprint that human beings are leaving on the planet. Collectively these works can be seen as a call to a new vision, a new way of seeing the Earth and our relationship to it.”

Girls with Sacks, 2007. 
Young girls drag sacks of rubbish they collected during a days work. They walk across a heavy steel plate roadway which stops heavy vehicles sinking into the rubbish.
 From the series Smokey Mountain and Recycling Phnom Penh, 2007-2010. 
Photo credit: Courtesy of artist Nigel Dickinson

Girls with Sacks, 2007. 
Young girls drag sacks of rubbish they collected during a days work. They walk across a heavy steel plate roadway which stops heavy vehicles sinking into the rubbish.
 From the series Smokey Mountain and Recycling Phnom Penh, 2007-2010. 
Photo credit: Courtesy of artist Nigel Dickinson

 

To create the Pictures of Garbage series, Vik Muniz worked with the catadores, or pickers, from the world’s largest landfill: Jardim Gramacho in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Photo credit: Courtesy of the artist Vik Muniz
To create the Pictures of Garbage series, Vik Muniz worked with the catadores, or pickers, from the world’s largest landfill: Jardim Gramacho in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Photo credit: Courtesy of the artist Vik Muniz

The artworks at the exhibition depict topics such as climate change, industrialization and urbanization, biodiversity, water, the use of natural and human resources, human migration, global capital, commerce and consumption, energy production and waste.

“It is time again to ‘see’ the beauty and wonder of this planet. How do we stimulate people to actually care about the Earth and what is happening to it? What can art do in this regard?” Watriss said. “We have found that many artists are looking at these same questions and exploring how they, as individuals and members of a society, relate to the natural world around them.”


Titan Crane, Hotellneset Coal Harbour, Longyearbyen, Spitsbergen, Norway, 2012
. From the series The Metabolic Landscape, 2011-2016. Photo credit: Courtesy of the artist Gina Glover
Titan Crane, Hotellneset Coal Harbour, Longyearbyen, Spitsbergen, Norway, 2012
. From the series The Metabolic Landscape, 2011-2016. Photo credit: Courtesy of the artist Gina Glover

The exhibition will feature pieces from artists who hail from nine countries across Europe, Asia, and North and South America.  Many of the artists will travel to Houston to participate in lectures, tours and other programs during the Biennial.

Scroll down to the photos at the bottom of this post, and you’ll notice that mankind is finding ways to survive on a warming planet, where hurricanes are getting stronger and droughts are hitting harder.

From renewable energy to green buildings and rooftops, many of us are making positive changes to mitigate a global catastrophe. At least we have to before it’s too late.


AfterRip, 2015. 
From the series Afterfracking. 
Photo credit: Courtesy of the Artist Roberto Fernández Ibáñez
AfterRip, 2015. 
From the series Afterfracking. 
Photo credit: Courtesy of the artist Roberto Fernández Ibáñez

 

Silver Lake Operations # 1, Lake Lefroy, Western Australia, Australia, 2007
From the series Mines, 2007. Photo credit: 
Courtesy of the Artist Edward Burtynsky

Silver Lake Operations # 1, Lake Lefroy, Western Australia, Australia, 2007
. From the series Mines, 2007. Photo credit: 
Courtesy of the artist Edward Burtynsky

 


Water collects in unnamed seasonal lake atop the Greenland ice sheet, 75 miles southeast of Ilulissat. With the Earth’s warming climate, the melt season now stretches 70 days longer than it did in the early 1970s, 2014
. From the series Greenland
. Photo credit: Courtesy of the artist Daniel Beltrán and Catherine Edelman Gallery, Chicago
Water collects in unnamed seasonal lake atop the Greenland ice sheet, 75 miles southeast of Ilulissat. With the Earth’s warming climate, the melt season now stretches 70 days longer than it did in the early 1970s, 2014
. From the series Greenland
. Photo credit: Courtesy of the artist Daniel Beltrá and Catherine Edelman Gallery, Chicago

 

From the series The Evolution of Ivanpah Solar. Photo credit: Courtesy of the artist Jamey Stillings
From the series The Evolution of Ivanpah Solar. Photo credit: Courtesy of the artist Jamey Stillings

 


Lurie Children’s Memorial (looking Southwest) – Chicago, IL May, 2012. 
From the series Rooftop.
 Photo credit: Courtesy of the Artist Brad Temkin and Innova Art LTD.
Lurie Children’s Memorial (looking Southwest) – Chicago, IL May, 2012. 
From the series Rooftop.
 Photo credit: Courtesy of the artist Brad Temkin and Innova Art LTD

This article was originally published on EcoWatch.

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