Current:Home > MarketsTheir lands are oceans apart but are linked by rising, warming seas of climate change -Ascend Finance Compass
Their lands are oceans apart but are linked by rising, warming seas of climate change
View
Date:2025-04-17 11:49:37
Editor's note: As the 2021 U.N. Climate Change Summit convenes, NPR's Picture Show is taking a look at work by artists and visual journalists that highlight climate change.
Vlad Sokhin's interest in climate change came from his own global upbringing.
Born in Russia, and having spent formative years in Portugal, Sokhin made a career as a documentary photographer capturing health and human rights issues in Europe, Africa and Asia. Yet it was a 2013 assignment to cover deforestation in Papua New Guinea that convinced him to train his lens on humanity's impact on the planet.
"I saw how the environment was changing because of illegal logging," Sokhin tells NPR. "But the big picture wasn't there. I thought, 'What if I extend a little bit?'"
Eight years and thousands of miles later, the result is Warm Waters, (Schilt Publishing, 2021) an exploration of climate change traveling across 18 countries and off-the-map territories seen by seldom few.
Within his native Russia, Sokhin, 40, spends time with communities on the Kamchatka Peninsula. Across the Barents Sea, he photographs native Inupiat and Yupik settlements in Alaska. Both are confronting the same coastal erosion and melting permafrost — the once-frozen soil layer now fast disappearing throughout the Arctic region.
Mostly, Sokhin explores Oceania — the South Pacific — where rising tides have inundated communities in places like the Aleutian Islands, Micronesia, Kiribati, Vanuatu and Tuvalu. Some may recover, others may soon be lost to the sea forever. Yet Sokhin's lens is constantly drawn to locals trying to adapt the best they can.
As a book, Warm Waters is no straightforward travel narrative. Sokhin eschews the traditional format of photos with captions and location information, and instead opts for what he calls "tonal narratives" — unexpected visual connections across cultures, countries, and, of course, bodies of water.
"You can see what's happening there and it doesn't matter which island it is," says Sokhin. "This is affecting everyone."
At its core, Warm Waters is one photographer's attempt to show how global warming is connecting seemingly disparate lives across vast distances.
What Sokhin finds is cause for extreme worry, of course; but also moments of resilience and wonder.
veryGood! (62826)
Related
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- Zayn Malik Reveals His Relationship Status After Gigi Hadid Breakup—And Getting Kicked Off Tinder
- Krispy Kreme teams up with Dolly Parton for new doughnuts: See the collection
- Ariana Madix Called Out for How Quickly She Moved on From Tom Sandoval in VPR Reunion Preview
- Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
- The Daily Money: Melinda Gates to step down
- `Micropreemie’ baby who weighed just over 1 pound at birth goes home from Illinois hospital
- Harvard students end protest as university agrees to discuss Middle East conflict
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- Alice Munro, Nobel laureate revered as short story master, dies at 92
Ranking
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Sidewalk video ‘Portal’ linking New York, Dublin by livestream temporarily paused after lewd antics
- 5-year-old Colorado girl dies after being strangled by swing set in backyard: Police
- Man gets over three years in prison for posting video threatening school shooting in New Hampshire
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- Remains of missing South Carolina mother last seen in December found in wooded area
- 'That was a big (expletive) win': Blue Jays survive clubhouse plague for extra-inning win
- NFL scores legal victory in ex-Raiders coach Jon Gruden's lawsuit against league
Recommendation
New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
Drowning deaths surged during the pandemic — and it was worse among Black people, CDC reports
15-year-old girl killed in hit-and-run boat crash in Florida: 'She brought so much joy'
Willow Smith debut novel 'Black Shield Maiden' is a powerful fantasy: Check it out
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Prisoner sentenced to 4 years for threatening to kill Kamala Harris, Obama, DeSantis
Bill Burr declares cancel culture 'over,' Bill Maher says Louis C.K. was reprimanded 'enough'
Horoscopes Today, May 14, 2024