By Carol Strickland
Justin Brice Guariglia works on thin ice. The forty-three-year-old former photojournalist, whose images of China have appeared in National Geographic, Smithsonian, and the New York Times, accompanied NASA from 2015 to 2016, occupied with a project to map the accelerating melting of ice sheets in Greenland. His aerial photographs document the rapid rate at which 110,000-year-old Arctic glaciers are disappearing. To produce his images of snowy vistas that look like cratered moonscapes, Guariglia modified a seventeen-and-a-half-foot-long printer and applies as many as 140 layers of acrylic ink, creating images that exist somewhere between painting and photography.
Until January 7, 2018, the Norton Museum of Art in West Palm Beach, Florida, hosts Guariglia’s first solo museum exhibition, “Earth Works: Mapping the Anthropocene.” The twenty-two works (some as large as sixteen by twelve feet) give durable—and thought-provoking—visual and physical form to the fact and cause of environmental loss.
I recently sat down with Guariglia and Norton Museum photography curator Tim B. Wride in the artist’s Brooklyn studio to talk about the exhibition for Art in Amerca. According to Wride, Guariglia’s work is “implicitly high modernist, à la Edward Weston and Minor White,” referring to the sharp focus and emphasis on shape, line, tone, highlights, and shadows. At the same time, Wride says, Guariglia moves New Topographics photography—unromanticized views of landscapes that reveal man’s impact—“forty years into the future, into a conceptualized, intellectual realm.”
CAROL STRICKLAND Why did you switch from photojournalism to photo-based conceptual art documenting man’s impact on the environment?
JUSTIN BRICE GUARIGLIA I came to the work through living in Asia. For the last twenty to twenty-five years, Asia has been like a rocket ship economically. I remember going outside and my nose was running black from small particles of coal. That’s when [the effect of human activity] clobbered me over the head. I realized that the tremendous growth required consuming as many fossil fuels as possible to power it.
We don’t think that switching on a light will impact a glacier thousands of miles away. It’s all connected, but we’re disconnected from that. We don’t mean to damage the earth when we plug in our phones to charge them, but the accretion of seven billion people doing it brings it to light as an existential issue. All this work is about exploring these ideas.
STRICKLAND Why do you print your photographs of melting glaciers and sea ice on polystyrene?
GUARIGLIA Polystyrene is a very naughty object; it has a lot of baggage. It’s a product of the Anthropocene, a human-made product, yet it’s derived from fossil fuels. If left alone, polystyrene will never biodegrade. It’ll be around forever.
STRICKLAND So you print images of vanishing glaciers on a permanent, petroleum-based material, the production of which contributed to the melting of the ice?
GUARIGLIA Yes, the material is very important.
TIM B. WRIDE Justin’s work looks like documentation, but it’s so much more. It’s a distillation of all this information through an artist’s mind. He doesn’t simply picture what’s in front of him but captures what’s gone—and what we have contributed to that “goneness.” It’s hard for a photographer to picture one thing and talk about something else.