The eerie impact of humanity on nature, in photos
- Text by Miss Rosen
- Photography by Otto Olaf Becker
For more than 30 years, German photographer Otto Olaf Becker has been documenting the earth’s landscape. His work explores the impact of overpopulation on natural resources – including land, water, food, energy, and heavy metals – in remote corners of the earth, where few see what is happening in real time.
After completing his work in Greenland, Becker headed south to Malaysia and Indonesia to explore the devolution of forests under human stewardship. This led to his book Reading the Landscape (Hatje Cantz), selections from which will be on view at ClampArt during The Photography Show presented by AIPAD. Here, Becker shows us beauty, tragedy, and farce in a three-act narrative.
Reading the Landscape opens as the Bible does, with the sublime grandeur of nature, before introducing haunting scenes of destruction that suggest a war fought — and lost. Becker concludes with images made in Singapore, where nature is rendered impotent and reimagined as décor.
“We are educated to experience a nature that is a complete invention by human beings,” Becker says. “It is like Disney; it’s not real. There’s an image of a nature trail in the botanical garden, and they arrange the flowers and plants in a way you would never find this combination in nature, but it looks good. They even have speakers where you can listen to the sound of birds. It’s kitsch: overdone and wrong.”
For Becker, the experience of untouched primary forests has transcendent power that extends to the photograph. “One reason that I took photographs of the untouched primary forest is you can only miss things you came to know,” he says.
“It is incredible to walk through a primary forest and hear the animals, see the beauty of nature. A lot of people don’t have this experience. In the future, if we don’t have these things anymore, people will not miss it because they do not know it.”
Instead, we may acclimatise to the artificial installations, despite their ultimate environmental impact. “In Singapore, there is a hotel completely decorated with plants – but it’s not good for the plants; they die and have to be replaced again and again. They are just decoration. We have lost contact with nature.”
Despite the devastation Becker has witnessed, he remains an optimist: “I see all over in the world that the people understand we have climate change and we have to change something but we have to work together and the problem is to work together worldwide.”
“We will not be able to solve this problem quickly. We will solve it the more we feel the consequences. When everyone is feeling the consequences, then everyone understands the need to change something. It still needs time.”
Reading the Landscape will be view at ClampArt during The Photography Show presented by AIPAD (April 4–7).
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