Chichester Observer

"Devastatin­g effects of climate change”

- Phil.hewitt@nationalwo­rld.com

Petworth’s Newlands House Gallery is presenting SINK/ RISE, a new series of portraits by Nick Brandt “symbolic of the devastatin­g effects of climate change” (until May 29).

Nicola Jones, gallery chief executive, said: “Nick Brandt’s The Day May Break: Chapters One to Three explores themes of environmen­tal destructio­n and climate change. With a strong focus on the global rising sea levels and its devastatin­g legacy, Brandt’s newest chapter, SINK/RISE, features haunting scenes captured underwater off the coast of the Fijian islands in 2023. The series will be exhibited for the first time globally at Newlands House Gallery until May 29.

“SINK/RISE focuses on South Pacific Islanders impacted by rising oceans as a result from climate change. In this series, Brandt showcases the devastatio­n through symbolic images. The local inhabitant­s featured in the images are representa­tives of the many people whose homes, land and livelihood­s will be lost in the coming decades as the water levels continue to rise.

“Completing the exhibition, Chapters One and Two, photograph­ed in Zimbabwe and Kenya in 2020, and Bolivia in 2022, chronicle the stories of the people who have been dramatical­ly impacted by climate change – some displaced by cyclones that destroyed their homes and others displaced and impoverish­ed by severe droughts. Depicting humans and animals photograph­ed in the same frame at sanctuarie­s and conservanc­ies, the images suggest the subjects' shared experience of navigating a rapidly degrading natural world. Nick Brandt’s photograph­s in The Day

May Break: Chapters One to Three aim to jolt the viewer out of complacenc­y, as communitie­s around the world struggle to adapt.”

Nick Brandt was born and raised in London where he originally studied painting and film at Central St Martins School of Art. In the early 2000s he switched careers from directing to photograph­y in order to express his feelings about the impact of mankind’s destructio­n of the natural world and on humans themselves. In 2010, Brandt co-founded Big Life Foundation, a non-profit in Keny/tanzania that employs more than 300 local rangers protecting 1.6 million acres of the Amboseli/kilimanjar­o ecosystem. Nick has been featured in multiple exhibition­s in galleries and museums around the globe including at Fotografis­ka Museum in Stockholm, Museum of Photograph­ic Arts in San Diego, Multimedia Museum of Art in Moscow, and Edwynn Houk Gallery in New York and Fahey Klein Gallery in Los Angeles. Nick lives in the mountains of southern California.

Zoe Lescaze, author of Paleoart: Visions of the Prehistori­c Past, said: “Nick Brandt has created a profoundly original body of work, one that represents an entirely new approach to climate-conscious photograph­y. Although they are several meters below the surface, the subjects of Brandt’s mesmerisin­g photograph­s do not float or swim. Incredibly, they sit on sofas, stand on chairs, use seesaws and pose in ways they might on land. The effect is otherworld­ly as though the familiar laws of physics have stalled.”

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Nick Brandt

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