Paper Bags, 2007, 60x80"
Introducing Chris Jordan, a photographer shining his lens on the problem of mass consumption.
In honor of Earth Day earlier this week, here are photos from Jordan's series, "Running the Numbers: An American Self-Portrait." The one above depicts 1.14 million brown paper supermarket bags, the number used in the US every hour. See below for a close up at actual scale.
Paper Bags, 2007, detail, actual size
This series seeks to represent visually some of the astounding statistics that describe American consumption of particular materials hopefully moving those statistics from the abstract to the comprehensible. For instance, below, 60,000 plastic bags, the number used in the US every five seconds.
Plastic Bags, 2007, 60x72"
Plastic Bags, 2007, detail, actual scale
These large intricately detailed prints are assembled from thousands of smaller photographs and much of their impact is best grasped seeing them in person, at full scale. These web-scaled versions as just a tease. Thankfully, Jordans NY gallery will be hosting an exhibition from this series in June.
Below, in homage to the great pointilist painter, a depiction of 106,000 aluminum cans, the number used in the US every thirty seconds.
Cans Seurat, 2006. 60x92"
Cans Seurat, 2006. Close up.
Cans Seurat, 2006. Detail, actual size
Here are two earlier images from his explorations of shipping ports and industrial yards; from the series Intolerable Beauty: Portraits of American Mass Consumption.
Wall of Drums, Seattle 2003 (homage to Christo) 44x56"
Container yard #2, Seattle 2004. 44x56"
In the artists words, Collectively we are committing a vast and unsustainable act of taking, but we each are anonymous and no one is in charge or accountable for the consequences...So my hope is that these photographs can serve as portals to a kind of cultural self-inquiry. It may not be the most comfortable terrain, but I have heard it said that in risking self-awareness, at least we know that we are awake.
The artist notes that this particular series is still in its early stages, and new images will be posted as they are completed on his site.
Inquiries? Please contact the Von Lintel Gallery directly via email.
A show of Jordan's work is slated to open at The Von Lintel Gallery this June 14 at 555 West 25th Street, New York, NY 10001
Know any artists whose work would make a home a lovelier place? Send ideas to The Gallery. Thanks!
Longtime fan of Chris Jordan. Real statement pieces that don't sacrifice the formal aspect of art... beautiful and disturbing in equal measure.
view patrick (the other one)'s profile
Really love his work. It's beautiful, sad and terrifying.
view I Love Upstate's profile
They're beautiful. But seriously, you could fairly easily not be disturbed by them, if the artist didn't tell you what the agenda was.
view Curtis's profile
I admired Chris Jordan's first series, but this new work looks like the work of an art school undergrad. Politically, it really brings nothing to the debate and he relies on well worn visual gimmickry to pull it off. Oh, and if you want to purchase the Cans Seurat piece, it's going to set you back at least $35k. Ouch.
view mannymota's profile
Interesting comment, mannymota. I have been wondering about the difference of an ostensibly unmanipulated photo (such as the earlier work) and the manipluations required to construct those in the latest series. I do think the paper bags one is the most successful merging of manipulation and resulting imagery... as the individual bags come to resemble the trees they are made from.
view amy's profile
I don't quite understand what hes trying to say with some of these? - whats wrong with using brown paper bags? - they are the most easily recyclable bag and you've got to have something to carry stuff home in - and cans are recyclable too - why does it matter how many we used each day? - what are we going to package drinks in if we don't use cans? - or is he trying to say don't drink commercially produced drinks at all?
view Violetsrose's profile
You guys are reading alot into it. It's still art, regardless of the manipulation or the topical nature of the "subject". If anything, I think Jordan's work is about consumption, more than the envirnoment.
And can I correct on assumption people seem to have? Just because something is recyclable doesn't mean it's a completely benign commodity as far as the environment is concerned. Energy is STILL used to recycle cans and paper.
The reams of paper pretty much damns my line of work, though.
view ChickieLou's profile
You can see "Running The Numbers" in Second Life. Details at http://hubpages.com/hub/q2gallery
view Francis's profile