Chris Jordan: Turning powerful stats into art

171,667 views ・ 2008-06-23

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:12
My work is about the behaviors that we all engage in unconsciously,
0
12160
5000
00:17
on a collective level.
1
17160
2000
00:19
And what I mean by that, it's the behaviors
2
19160
2000
00:21
that we're in denial about,
3
21160
1000
00:22
and the ones that operate below the surface of our daily awareness.
4
22160
6000
00:29
And as individuals, we all do these things, all the time, everyday.
5
29160
3000
00:32
It's like when you're mean to your wife
6
32160
2000
00:35
because you're mad at somebody else.
7
35160
1000
00:37
Or when you drink a little too much at a party, just out of anxiety.
8
37160
3000
00:40
Or when you overeat because your feelings are hurt, or whatever.
9
40160
5000
00:46
And when we do these kind of things,
10
46160
2000
00:48
when 300 million people do unconscious behaviors,
11
48160
4000
00:52
then it can add up to a catastrophic consequence
12
52160
3000
00:55
that nobody wants, and no one intended.
13
55160
2000
00:57
And that's what I look at with my photographic work.
14
57160
3000
01:00
This is an image I just recently completed, that is --
15
60160
4000
01:04
when you stand back at a distance,
16
64160
1000
01:05
it looks like some kind of neo-Gothic, cartoon image
17
65160
3000
01:08
of a factory spewing out pollution.
18
68160
3000
01:11
And as you get a little bit closer,
19
71160
2000
01:14
it starts looking like lots of pipes, like maybe a chemical plant,
20
74160
4000
01:18
or a refinery, or maybe a hellish freeway interchange.
21
78160
3000
01:22
And as you get all the way up close,
22
82160
1000
01:23
you realize that it's actually made of lots and lots of plastic cups.
23
83160
4000
01:28
And in fact, this is one million plastic cups,
24
88160
2000
01:30
which is the number of plastic cups that are used on airline flights
25
90160
4000
01:35
in the United States every six hours.
26
95160
1000
01:36
We use four million cups a day on airline flights,
27
96160
4000
01:41
and virtually none of them are reused or recycled.
28
101160
2000
01:43
They just don't do that in that industry.
29
103160
2000
01:46
Now, that number is dwarfed
30
106160
2000
01:48
by the number of paper cups we use every day,
31
108160
2000
01:51
and that is 40 million cups a day for hot beverages,
32
111160
3000
01:54
most of which is coffee.
33
114160
1000
01:55
I couldn't fit 40 million cups on a canvas,
34
115160
3000
01:58
but I was able to put 410,000. That's what 410,000 cups looks like.
35
118160
4000
02:03
That's 15 minutes of our cup consumption.
36
123160
1000
02:04
And if you could actually stack up that many cups in real life,
37
124160
4000
02:08
that's the size it would be.
38
128160
1000
02:09
And there's an hour's worth of our cups.
39
129160
2000
02:12
And there's a day's worth of our cups.
40
132160
1000
02:13
You can still see the little people way down there.
41
133160
2000
02:15
That's as high as a 42-story building,
42
135160
2000
02:17
and I put the Statue of Liberty in there as a scale reference.
43
137160
4000
02:23
Speaking of justice, there's another phenomenon going on in our culture
44
143160
3000
02:26
that I find deeply troubling, and that is that America, right now,
45
146160
3000
02:29
has the largest percentage of its population in prison
46
149160
3000
02:32
of any country on Earth.
47
152160
2000
02:35
One out of four people, one out of four humans in prison
48
155160
3000
02:38
are Americans, imprisoned in our country.
49
158160
4000
02:43
And I wanted to show the number.
50
163160
1000
02:44
The number is 2.3 million Americans were incarcerated in 2005.
51
164160
4000
02:48
And that's gone up since then, but we don't have the numbers yet.
52
168160
2000
02:50
So, I wanted to show 2.3 million prison uniforms,
53
170160
3000
02:54
and in the actual print of this piece,
54
174160
3000
02:57
each uniform is the size of a nickel on its edge.
55
177160
3000
03:00
They're tiny. They're barely visible as a piece of material,
56
180160
3000
03:03
and to show 2.3 million of them required a canvas
57
183160
3000
03:07
that was larger than any printer in the world would print.
58
187160
2000
03:09
And so I had to divide it up into multiple panels
59
189160
2000
03:11
that are 10 feet tall by 25 feet wide.
60
191160
2000
03:13
This is that piece installed in a gallery in New York --
61
193160
4000
03:18
those are my parents looking at the piece.
62
198160
2000
03:20
(Laughter)
63
200160
2000
03:23
Every time I look at this piece,
64
203160
1000
03:24
I always wonder if my mom's whispering to my dad,
65
204160
2000
03:26
"He finally folded his laundry."
66
206160
2000
03:28
(Laughter)
67
208160
1000
03:31
I want to show you some pieces now that are about addiction.
68
211160
2000
03:33
And this particular one is about cigarette addiction.
69
213160
4000
03:37
I wanted to make a piece that shows the actual number of Americans
70
217160
3000
03:40
who die from cigarette smoking.
71
220160
2000
03:42
More than 400,000 people die in the United States every year
72
222160
3000
03:45
from smoking cigarettes.
73
225160
2000
03:47
And so, this piece is made up of lots and lots of boxes of cigarettes.
74
227160
4000
03:51
And, as you slowly step back,
75
231160
1000
03:52
you see that it's a painting by Van Gogh, called "Skull with Cigarette."
76
232160
4000
03:56
It's a strange thing to think about, that on 9/11,
77
236160
4000
04:00
when that tragedy happened, 3,000 Americans died.
78
240160
2000
04:02
And do you remember the response?
79
242160
2000
04:05
It reverberated around the world,
80
245160
2000
04:07
and will continue to reverberate through time.
81
247160
3000
04:10
It will be something that we talk about in 100 years.
82
250160
3000
04:13
And yet on that same day, 1,100 Americans died from smoking.
83
253160
5000
04:18
And the day after that, another 1,100 Americans died from smoking.
84
258160
3000
04:21
And every single day since then, 1,100 Americans have died.
85
261160
3000
04:25
And today, 1,100 Americans are dying from cigarette smoking.
86
265160
2000
04:27
And we aren't talking about it -- we dismiss it.
87
267160
4000
04:32
The tobacco lobby, it's too strong.
88
272160
2000
04:34
We just dismiss it out of our consciousness.
89
274160
2000
04:38
And knowing what we know about the destructive power of cigarettes,
90
278160
6000
04:44
we continue to allow our children, our sons and daughters,
91
284160
4000
04:48
to be in the presence of the influences that start them smoking.
92
288160
3000
04:51
And this is what the next piece is about.
93
291160
2000
04:54
This is just lots and lots of cigarettes: 65,000 cigarettes,
94
294160
3000
04:57
which is equal to the number of teenagers
95
297160
2000
05:00
who will start smoking this month, and every month in the U.S.
96
300160
3000
05:03
More than 700,000 children in the United States aged 18 and under
97
303160
4000
05:07
begin smoking every year.
98
307160
2000
05:09
One more strange epidemic in the United States
99
309160
5000
05:15
that I want to acquaint you with
100
315160
2000
05:17
is this phenomenon of abuse and misuse of prescription drugs.
101
317160
5000
05:23
This is an image I've made out of lots and lots of Vicodin.
102
323160
4000
05:27
Well, actually, I only had one Vicodin
103
327160
2000
05:29
that I scanned lots and lots of times.
104
329160
2000
05:31
(Laughter)
105
331160
1000
05:32
And so, as you stand back, you see 213,000 Vicodin pills,
106
332160
3000
05:35
which is the number of hospital emergency room visits
107
335160
3000
05:39
yearly in the United States,
108
339160
1000
05:40
attributable to abuse and misuse of prescription painkillers
109
340160
5000
05:45
and anti-anxiety medications.
110
345160
1000
05:46
One-third of all drug overdoses in the U.S. --
111
346160
4000
05:50
and that includes cocaine, heroin, alcohol, everything --
112
350160
3000
05:53
one-third of drug overdoses are prescription medications.
113
353160
4000
05:58
A strange phenomenon.
114
358160
1000
05:59
This is a piece that I just recently completed
115
359160
4000
06:03
about another tragic phenomenon. And that is the phenomenon,
116
363160
3000
06:06
this growing obsession we have with breast augmentation surgery.
117
366160
4000
06:12
384,000 women, American women, last year
118
372160
4000
06:16
went in for elective breast augmentation surgery.
119
376160
4000
06:21
It's rapidly becoming the most popular high school graduation gift,
120
381160
4000
06:25
given to young girls who are about to go off to college.
121
385160
4000
06:31
So, I made this image out of Barbie dolls,
122
391160
3000
06:34
and so, as you stand back you see this kind of floral pattern,
123
394160
5000
06:39
and as you get all the way back, you see 32,000 Barbie dolls,
124
399160
4000
06:43
which represents the number of breast augmentation surgeries
125
403160
3000
06:46
that are performed in the U.S. each month.
126
406160
2000
06:48
The vast majority of those are on women under the age of 21.
127
408160
5000
06:54
And strangely enough, the only plastic surgery
128
414160
2000
06:56
that is more popular than breast augmentation is liposuction,
129
416160
4000
07:00
and most of that is being done by men.
130
420160
2000
07:02
Now, I want to emphasize that these are just examples.
131
422160
4000
07:06
I'm not holding these out as being the biggest issues.
132
426160
3000
07:09
They're just examples.
133
429160
2000
07:12
And the reason that I do this, it's because I have this fear
134
432160
4000
07:16
that we aren't feeling enough as a culture right now.
135
436160
3000
07:20
There's this kind of anesthesia in America at the moment.
136
440160
3000
07:23
We've lost our sense of outrage, our anger and our grief
137
443160
8000
07:31
about what's going on in our culture right now,
138
451160
2000
07:33
what's going on in our country,
139
453160
1000
07:34
the atrocities that are being committed in our names around the world.
140
454160
2000
07:36
They've gone missing; these feelings have gone missing.
141
456160
3000
07:40
Our cultural joy, our national joy is nowhere to be seen.
142
460160
3000
07:43
And one of the causes of this, I think,
143
463160
3000
07:47
is that as each of us attempts to build this new kind of worldview,
144
467160
4000
07:51
this holoptical worldview, this holographic image
145
471160
4000
07:55
that we're all trying to create in our mind
146
475160
2000
07:57
of the interconnection of things: the environmental footprints
147
477160
3000
08:00
1,000 miles away of the things that we buy;
148
480160
3000
08:03
the social consequences 10,000 miles away
149
483160
2000
08:06
of the daily decisions that we make as consumers.
150
486160
3000
08:09
As we try to build this view,
151
489160
2000
08:11
and try to educate ourselves about the enormity of our culture,
152
491160
3000
08:14
the information that we have to work with is these gigantic numbers:
153
494160
5000
08:20
numbers in the millions, in the hundreds of millions,
154
500160
3000
08:23
in the billions and now in the trillions.
155
503160
2000
08:26
Bush's new budget is in the trillions, and these are numbers
156
506160
2000
08:28
that our brain just doesn't have the ability to comprehend.
157
508160
3000
08:32
We can't make meaning out of these enormous statistics.
158
512160
4000
08:36
And so that's what I'm trying to do with my work,
159
516160
3000
08:40
is to take these numbers, these statistics
160
520160
1000
08:41
from the raw language of data, and to translate them
161
521160
5000
08:46
into a more universal visual language, that can be felt.
162
526160
3000
08:49
Because my belief is, if we can feel these issues,
163
529160
4000
08:53
if we can feel these things more deeply,
164
533160
2000
08:55
then they'll matter to us more than they do now.
165
535160
4000
09:00
And if we can find that,
166
540160
1000
09:01
then we'll be able to find, within each one of us,
167
541160
4000
09:06
what it is that we need to find to face the big question,
168
546160
3000
09:09
which is: how do we change?
169
549160
2000
09:12
That, to me, is the big question that we face as a people right now:
170
552160
5000
09:17
how do we change? How do we change as a culture,
171
557160
3000
09:21
and how do we each individually take responsibility
172
561160
4000
09:25
for the one piece of the solution that we are in charge of,
173
565160
3000
09:29
and that is our own behavior?
174
569160
1000
09:30
My belief is that you don't have to make yourself bad
175
570160
9000
09:40
to look at these issues.
176
580160
2000
09:42
I'm not pointing the finger at America in a blaming way.
177
582160
4000
09:46
I'm simply saying, this is who we are right now.
178
586160
2000
09:48
And if there are things that we see
179
588160
2000
09:50
that we don't like about our culture,
180
590160
1000
09:51
then we have a choice.
181
591160
2000
10:02
The degree of integrity that each of us can bring to the surface,
182
602160
5000
10:07
to bring to this question, the depth of character that we can summon,
183
607160
5000
10:14
as we show up for the question of how do we change --
184
614160
3000
10:17
it's already defining us as individuals and as a nation,
185
617160
6000
10:25
and it will continue to do that, on into the future.
186
625160
3000
10:28
And it will profoundly affect the well-being, the quality of life
187
628160
7000
10:35
of the billions of people
188
635160
1000
10:36
who are going to inherit the results of our decisions.
189
636160
5000
10:45
I'm not speaking abstractly about this,
190
645160
1000
10:46
I'm speaking -- this is who we are in this room,
191
646160
9000
10:56
right now, in this moment.
192
656160
2000
10:58
Thank you and good afternoon.
193
658160
4000
11:03
(Applause)
194
663160
6000
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7