Rachel Lee: Quicksilver's Legacy
deforested landscape; polluted water
deforested landscape; polluted water
The critical commentary offers quantitative data re acres of rainforest destroyed (that which appears to be immediately represented by the photo) and 40% of population affected by mercury contamination. There are no people in this photo, or in any of the photos. Is that deliberate? Is the idea not to put a human face on the toxicant contamination b/c it's too 'sentimental' or 'invasive'? This contrasts the Minimata photos of the clawed hand. Part of me wonders why there's an avoidance of representing the toxicity as embodied in the people--the miners: it this b
Mud against blue skies
My eye is drawn to the debris and then through the space to walk through between two small embankments; then toward the horizon of scattered trees and the tilt of the landscape through the framing aslant. My eye ends on the muddy water pool to the right.
The image seems to communicate environmental degradation and loss of biodiversity in what was once a lush rainforest.
liquidification
photograph
My eye wanders in search of human bodies - I see initially the (environmental) impacts of humanity without the human subjects themselves. What happens to this area after it has been mined of its value in gold?
For this photo, I'm taking a more general approach and ditching the questions. The image hardly seems to do anything that the second image does not already do. I'd be curious to see any visual evidence of this rate of mercury dumping which so thoroughly surpassing what occurred at Minamata. Do you have any photographs of people downstream suffering health effects of this region's ecologically devasting mining practice? Conversely, your discussion of the market for gold makes me curious to see the gold in use.