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ted.com

29

Oct

2008

Artist Spotlight: Chris Jordan

What Van Gogh has to do with Big Tobacco and how piles of folded laundry put the prison system in perspective.

The best of art is about something bigger than aestheticism, something that reflects on culture and makes a social statement that moves people. The work of artist Chris Jordan does just that. It grabs culture by its most unsettling truths, then displays them in gripping visuals that are part data, part philosophy, part brilliant photographic art.

Skull With CigaretteRunning the Numbers: An American Self-Portrait, Jordan’s latest project, exposes those hidden layers of consumerism, the big truths we give little thought to, by putting the devastating scale of our cultural excess into perspective. A visualization of statistical data, the project attempts to bring a human perspective to the alienating world of numbers.

Each statistically accurate image is a collage of miniature photographs portraying a specific excess:  The 15 million sheets of office paper we use every 5 minutes, the 106,000 aluminum cans we chug every 30 seconds, the 3.6 million SUV’s we buy every year, the 2.3 million Americans in prison, and so forth.

Plastic Cups depicts the one million plastic cups U.S. airlines use every 6 hours. Looking at the image from far away, it resembles a neo-industrial landscape where factories are spewing filth into the sky. Closer up, it transforms into a series of interwoven pipes. And really close up, you realize these are all stacks of actual plastic cups.

Plastic Cups

Plastic Cups: partial zoom

Pastic Cups: full zoom

Barbie Dolls exposes the 32,000 breast augmentation surgeries performed in the U.S. in 2006 through an equal number of Barbie dolls. The soft natural curves of a woman’s body seen in the full-scale image stand in stark contrast to the plasticky unrealness of the dolls in the close-up.

Barbie Dolls

Barbie Dolls: partial zoom

Barbie Dolls: full zoom

Denali Denial paints a portrait of the parts of nature we’re losing thanks to our reckless unsustainable habits. The image is composed of 24,000 logos from the GMC Yukon Denali, equal to six weeks of sales of that model SUV in 2004.

Denali Denial

Denali Denial: full zoom

Watch Chris Jordan’s eye-opening TED talk where he talks about his art, probes uncomfortable truths, and compares public reaction to the 3,000 deaths in 9/11 with the lack thereof to the 11,000 deaths from smoking that day and every other day.

What we admire most is that his art doesn’t aim to point the finger but, rather, to put our individual role as change agents into perspective.

In a world where large numbers have become practically meaningless, it’s easy to glide over the piles of zeroes, but it gets a little harder when we’re looking straight at the building blocks of our apocalypse.

We’ve got a weekly newsletter and people say it’s cool. It comes out on Sundays, offers the week’s articles, and features five more tasty bites of web-wide interestingness. Here’s an example. Like? Sign up.

  • Running The Numbers: Oceanographic Visualization What 20,500 tuna have to do with your old toothbrush, or how a plastic comb ended up on top of Mt. Fuji – Chris Jordan takes on the decline of marine ecosystems....
  • Artist Spotlight: Alice Wang What Isaac Asimov has to do with your body image and why your friends would rather you got 8 hours of sleep....
  • In-Formed: Physical Objects as Data Visualization Part data visualization, part industrial design, part social awareness – designer Nadeem Haidary's project exposes little-known facts designed to effect actual behavioral change by inspiring us to be a bit less wasteful....
  • Product Design Spotlight: The Little Bottle That Could A revolutionary donut-shaped plastic bottle introduces extreme functionality while solving major environmental problems....
  • Artist Spotlight: Adrian Johnson Because nothing non-awesome ever came from the U.K. We’re suckers for awesome illustration. So we dig U.K. artist Adrian Johnson, whose work spans anything from editorial stuff for iconic publications like The Guardian, GQ and The Monocle, to advertising for big-timers like Vodafone and Canon, to animation for a number...

4 Responses

  1. The Barbie Dolls is impressive.
    Would never have guessed – EVER

    Leafy Designz on October 30th, 2008 at 6:31 am
  2. Yes, very impressiv. I really like the “tube” pictures, Makes you almost wanting, that the airline produce more trash, so the picture grows %b

    thomase on October 30th, 2008 at 10:59 am
  3. [...] we love artist Chris Jordan’s (remember him?) response to the overlooked but tremendously concerning issue exposed by legendary ocean [...]

  4. [...] a certain Chris Jordanesque approach to the problem — knowing that global warming is already claiming 300,000 lives each [...]

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