Photographer documents man’s destruction of the natural world

Photographer documents man’s destruction of the natural world
Wild beasts reduced to ghosts in the city — Photographer Nick Brandt’s epic panoramas in Inherit The Dust highlight man’s destructive presence in places animals used to roam.

Photographing wildlife is a bittersweet career. Since 2001, fine art photographer Nick Brandt has been documenting the natural world and animals of East Africa – while seeing them disappear before his eyes. During the course of his career, he’s watched countless species driven from their homes and had their habitats destroyed.

His African trilogy, completed three years ago, On This Earth, A Shadow Falls, Across the Ravaged Land, ended with a somber conclusion: the process of devastation across the continent continues to escalate.

Brandt’s latest project, Inherit The Dust takes wild animals back to the landscapes where they used to roam free. But this is no triumphant return, animals from his own wildlife photographs are printed on panels and left to compete with – or be ignored by – the garbage pickers, street children and concrete infrastructure, that have taken their place. The once mighty beasts of the wild are reduced to ghosts in the urban landscape.

Huck spoke to Nick about using photography to provoke change and his experiences documenting disappearance.

What drew you to documenting animals and led you to East Africa?
Spending time in East Africa, in the wilds, I realised that photography was the way to express my lifelong feelings about animals and the endangered natural world, in a way that I thought had not been done before. Animals and nature were my first love, not photography. Photography was merely the best medium for me to express my feelings about the disappearing natural world.

'Wasteland With Lion'

‘Wasteland With Lion’

'Road With Elephant'

‘Road With Elephant’

What are the biggest threats to wildlife in East Africa today?
I, like many, used to believe that the biggest threat was poaching, feeding the insatiable demand for animal parts from the Far East.

Actually, it’s much more complex and monumental than that. Mainly, it’s about all of us. The terrifying number of us, and the impact of the very finite amount of space and resources for so many humans.

'Quarry With Giraffe'

‘Quarry With Giraffe’

'Wasteland With Rhinos'

‘Wasteland With Rhinos’

Could you share a story behind creating one of your images?
It drives me crazy when people think that the panels were just dropped in in Photoshop. So I’d like to mention one photo in particular, because for me, it confirms the superiority of real life, compared to Photoshop.

In ‘Underpass With Elephants’, 2015 (Lean Back, Your Life is On Track), I wanted just one person, probably a child, to see the animals in the panel, while all around, nobody else did. But I never imagined that this tiny boy on the right, a child of one of the many homeless people sleeping out on the land beneath this underpass, would wander into frame, fascinated by these giant elephants, and touch them with what appears to be a stick in his hand.

'Underpass With Elephants'

‘Underpass With Elephants’

I never imagined the cruelly juxtaposed billboard beyond, featuring a well-to-do middle class African man leaning back in his garden chair, with the tag line beneath: Lean Back, Your Life is On Track. I never imagined that the elephants would look so trapped between the two gargantuan concrete pillars, the matriarch appearing to be looking almost sympathetically at the humans also rendered homeless. I never imagined that her trunk would appear to be practically resting on the ground in front of the panel, not confined to the panel itself.

I never imagined all the homeless children sniffing glue. It’s hard to see clearly on a computer screen, but all those kids, some as young as 6 or 7 years old, were high on glue from the bottles hanging from their faces.

Making of Inherit the Dust

‘Making of Inherit the Dust’

ROAD TO FACTORY WITH ZEBRA

‘Road To Factory With Zebra’

How effective do you feel art projects like this can be in making change?
Good question. Honestly, I really don’t know how effective they can be. But one has to try and at least hope to be an incremental cog in the wheel of change, part of a cumulative awareness and outcry that eventually filters its way through to government and industry, where policy changes can be made to improve the planet in a meaningful way.

Nick Brandt’s Inherit The Dust is out now, published by Edwynn Houk Editions.

Inherit the Dust will be presented at PhotoLondon Art Fair at Somerset House, 19-22 May, by Atlas Gallery.

Latest on Huck

This erotic zine dismantles LGBTQ+ respectability politics
Culture

This erotic zine dismantles LGBTQ+ respectability politics

Zine Scene — Created by Megan Wallace and Jack Rowe, PULP is a new print publication that embraces the diverse and messy, yet pleasurable multitudes that sex and desire can take.

Written by: Isaac Muk

As Tbilisi’s famed nightclubs reawaken, a murky future awaits
Music

As Tbilisi’s famed nightclubs reawaken, a murky future awaits

Spaces Between the Beats — Since Georgia’s ruling party suspended plans for EU accession, protests have continued in the capital, with nightclubs shutting in solidarity. Victor Swezey reported on their New Year’s Eve reopening, finding a mix of anxiety, catharsis and defiance.

Written by: Victor Swezey

Los Angeles is burning: Rick Castro on fleeing his home once again
Culture

Los Angeles is burning: Rick Castro on fleeing his home once again

Braver New World — In 2020, the photographer fled the Bobcat Fire in San Bernardino to his East Hollywood home, sparking the inspiration for an unsettling photo series. Now, while preparing for its exhibition, he has had to leave once again, returning to the mountains.

Written by: Miss Rosen

Ghais Guevara: “Rap is a pinnacle of our culture”
Music

Ghais Guevara: “Rap is a pinnacle of our culture”

What Made Me — In our new series, we ask artists and rebels about the forces and experiences that have shaped who they are. First up, Philadelphian rap experimentalist Ghais Guevara.

Written by: Ghais Guevara

Gaza Biennale comes to London in ICA protest
Activism

Gaza Biennale comes to London in ICA protest

Art and action — The global project, which presents the work of over 60 Palestinian artists, will be on view outside the art institution in protest of an exhibition funded by Bloomberg Philanthropies.

Written by: Cyna Mirzai

Ragnar Axelsson’s thawing vision of Arctic life
Culture

Ragnar Axelsson’s thawing vision of Arctic life

At the Edge of the World — For over four decades, the Icelandic photographer has been journeying to the tip of the earth and documenting its communities. A new exhibition dives into his archive.

Written by: Cyna Mirzai

Sign up to our newsletter

Issue 81: The more than a game issue

Buy it now