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Drawings that show the beauty and fragility of Earth

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    I consider it my life's mission
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    to convey the urgency
    of climate change through my work.
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    I've traveled north to the Arctic
    to the capture the unfolding story
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    of polar melt,
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    and south to the Equator to document
    the subsequent rising seas.
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    Most recently, I visited
    the icy coast of Greenland
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    and the low-lying islands of the Maldives,
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    connecting two seemingly disparate
    but equally endangered
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    parts of our planet.
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    My drawings explore moments
    of transition, turbulence
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    and tranquility in the landscape,
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    allowing viewers to emotionally connect
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    with a place you might never
    have the chance to visit.
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    I choose to convey the beauty
    as opposed to the devastation.
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    If you can experience the sublimity
    of these landscapes,
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    perhaps you'll be inspired
    to protect and preserve them.
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    Behavioral psychology tells us
    that we take action
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    and make decisions based
    on our emotions above all else.
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    And studies have shown
    that art impacts our emotions
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    more effectively than a scary news report.
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    Experts predict ice-free Arctic summers
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    as early as 2020.
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    And sea levels are likely to rise
    between two and ten feet
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    by century's end.
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    I have dedicated my career
    to illuminating these projections
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    with an accessible medium,
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    one that moves us in a way
    that statistics may not.
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    My process begins
    with traveling to the places
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    at the forefront of climate change.
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    On-site, I take thousands of photographs.
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    Back in the studio,
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    I work from both my memory
    of the experience and the photographs
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    to create very large-scale compositions,
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    sometimes over 10 feet wide.
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    I draw with soft pastel, which is dry
    like charcoal, but colors.
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    I consider my work drawings
    but others call them painting.
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    I cringe, though, when I'm referred to
    as a "finger painter."
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    (Laughter)
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    But I don't use any tools
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    and I have always used
    my fingers and palms
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    to manipulate the pigment on the paper.
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    Drawing is a form of meditation for me.
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    It quiets my mind.
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    I don't perceive what I'm drawing
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    as ice or water.
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    Instead, the image is stripped down
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    to its most basic form of color and shape.
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    Once the piece is complete,
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    I can finally experience
    the composition as a whole,
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    as an iceberg floating
    through glassy water,
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    or a wave cresting with foam.
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    On average, a piece this size
    takes me about,
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    as you can see, 10 seconds.
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    (Laughter)
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    (Applause)
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    Really, more like 200 hours,
    250 hours for something that size.
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    But I've been drawing ever since
    I could hold a crayon, really.
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    My mom was an artist, and growing up,
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    we always had art supplies
    all over the house.
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    My mother's love of photography
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    propelled her to the most
    remote regions of the earth,
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    and my family and I were fortunate enough
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    to join and support her
    on these adventures.
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    We rode camels in Northern Africa
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    and mushed on dog sleds
    near the North Pole.
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    In August of 2012,
    I led my first expedition,
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    taking a group of artists and scholars
    up the northwest coast of Greenland.
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    My mother was originally
    supposed to lead this trip.
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    She and I were in the early
    stages of planning,
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    as we had intended to go together,
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    when she fell victim to a brain tumor.
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    The cancer quickly took over
    her body and mind,
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    and she passed away six months later.
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    During the months of her illness, though,
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    her dedication to the expedition
    never wavered, and I made a promise
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    to carry out her final journey.
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    My mother's passion for the Arctic
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    echoed through my experience in Greenland,
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    and I felt the power
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    and the fragility of the landscape.
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    The sheer size of the icebergs
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    is humbling.
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    The ice fields are alive
    with movement and sound
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    in a way that I never expected.
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    I expanded the scale of my compositions
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    to give you that same sense of awe
    that I experienced.
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    Yet, while the grandeur
    of the ice is evident,
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    so, too, is its vulnerability.
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    From our boat,
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    I could see the ice sweating
    under the unseasonably warm sun.
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    We had a chance to visit
    many of the Inuit communities in Greenland
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    that now face huge challenges.
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    The locals spoke to me
    of vast areas of sea ice
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    that are no longer
    freezing over as they once did.
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    And without ice, their hunting
    and harvesting grounds
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    are severely diminished,
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    threatening their way
    of life and survival.
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    The melting glaciers in Greenland
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    are one of the largest
    contributing factors to rising sea levels,
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    which have already begun to drown
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    some of our world's lowest-lying islands.
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    One year after my trip to Greenland,
    I visited the Maldives,
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    the lowest and flattest country
    in the entire world.
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    While I was there, I collected
    images and inspiration
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    for a new body of work:
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    drawings of waves lapping
    on the coast of a nation
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    that could be entirely underwater
    within this century.
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    Devastating events happen every day
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    on scales both global and personal.
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    When I was in Greenland,
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    I scattered my mother's ashes
    amidst the melting ice.
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    Now she remains a part
    of the landscape she loved so much,
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    even as it, too, passes
    and takes on new form.
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    Among the many gifts my mother gave me
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    was the ability to focus on the positive,
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    rather than the negative.
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    My drawings celebrate the beauty
    of what we all stand to lose.
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    I hope they can serve as records
    of sublime landscapes in flux,
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    documenting the transition
    and inspiring our global community
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    to take action for the future.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Drawings that show the beauty and fragility of Earth
Speaker:
Zaria Forman
Description:

Zaria Forman's large-scale compositions of melting glaciers, icebergs floating in glassy water and waves cresting with foam explore moments of transition, turbulence and tranquility. Join her as she discusses the meditative process of artistic creation and the motivation behind her work. "My drawings celebrate the beauty of what we all stand to lose," she says. "I hope they can serve as records of sublime landscapes in flux."

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
07:14

English subtitles

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