1 00:00:00,634 --> 00:00:03,853 I consider it my life's mission 2 00:00:03,877 --> 00:00:07,515 to convey the urgency of climate change through my work. 3 00:00:07,961 --> 00:00:11,702 I've traveled north to the Arctic to the capture the unfolding story 4 00:00:11,726 --> 00:00:13,205 of polar melt, 5 00:00:13,229 --> 00:00:17,141 and south to the Equator to document the subsequent rising seas. 6 00:00:17,903 --> 00:00:21,593 Most recently, I visited the icy coast of Greenland 7 00:00:21,617 --> 00:00:24,483 and the low-lying islands of the Maldives, 8 00:00:24,507 --> 00:00:28,984 connecting two seemingly disparate but equally endangered 9 00:00:29,008 --> 00:00:30,475 parts of our planet. 10 00:00:31,504 --> 00:00:37,547 My drawings explore moments of transition, turbulence 11 00:00:37,571 --> 00:00:40,285 and tranquility in the landscape, 12 00:00:40,309 --> 00:00:43,791 allowing viewers to emotionally connect 13 00:00:43,815 --> 00:00:46,530 with a place you might never have the chance to visit. 14 00:00:47,185 --> 00:00:51,579 I choose to convey the beauty as opposed to the devastation. 15 00:00:52,230 --> 00:00:56,662 If you can experience the sublimity of these landscapes, 16 00:00:56,686 --> 00:01:00,299 perhaps you'll be inspired to protect and preserve them. 17 00:01:01,545 --> 00:01:04,912 Behavioral psychology tells us that we take action 18 00:01:04,936 --> 00:01:09,062 and make decisions based on our emotions above all else. 19 00:01:09,497 --> 00:01:12,933 And studies have shown that art impacts our emotions 20 00:01:12,957 --> 00:01:16,284 more effectively than a scary news report. 21 00:01:17,193 --> 00:01:20,637 Experts predict ice-free Arctic summers 22 00:01:20,661 --> 00:01:23,163 as early as 2020. 23 00:01:23,521 --> 00:01:27,688 And sea levels are likely to rise between two and ten feet 24 00:01:27,712 --> 00:01:29,038 by century's end. 25 00:01:30,364 --> 00:01:35,040 I have dedicated my career to illuminating these projections 26 00:01:35,064 --> 00:01:37,128 with an accessible medium, 27 00:01:37,152 --> 00:01:41,606 one that moves us in a way that statistics may not. 28 00:01:42,684 --> 00:01:45,363 My process begins with traveling to the places 29 00:01:45,387 --> 00:01:47,686 at the forefront of climate change. 30 00:01:47,710 --> 00:01:50,672 On-site, I take thousands of photographs. 31 00:01:50,696 --> 00:01:51,939 Back in the studio, 32 00:01:51,963 --> 00:01:56,223 I work from both my memory of the experience and the photographs 33 00:01:56,247 --> 00:01:58,502 to create very large-scale compositions, 34 00:01:58,526 --> 00:02:00,666 sometimes over 10 feet wide. 35 00:02:01,412 --> 00:02:05,904 I draw with soft pastel, which is dry like charcoal, but colors. 36 00:02:06,456 --> 00:02:09,754 I consider my work drawings, but others call them painting. 37 00:02:10,203 --> 00:02:14,224 I cringe, though, when I'm referred to as a "finger painter." 38 00:02:14,248 --> 00:02:15,366 (Laughter) 39 00:02:15,390 --> 00:02:17,695 But I don't use any tools 40 00:02:17,719 --> 00:02:20,196 and I have always used my fingers and palms 41 00:02:20,220 --> 00:02:22,646 to manipulate the pigment on the paper. 42 00:02:23,990 --> 00:02:27,576 Drawing is a form of meditation for me. 43 00:02:28,354 --> 00:02:29,981 It quiets my mind. 44 00:02:30,437 --> 00:02:32,244 I don't perceive what I'm drawing 45 00:02:32,268 --> 00:02:33,641 as ice or water. 46 00:02:33,665 --> 00:02:36,127 Instead, the image is stripped down 47 00:02:36,151 --> 00:02:39,840 to its most basic form of color and shape. 48 00:02:40,964 --> 00:02:42,306 Once the piece is complete, 49 00:02:42,330 --> 00:02:45,466 I can finally experience the composition as a whole, 50 00:02:45,490 --> 00:02:48,052 as an iceberg floating through glassy water, 51 00:02:48,076 --> 00:02:50,766 or a wave cresting with foam. 52 00:02:51,884 --> 00:02:55,806 On average, a piece this size takes me about, 53 00:02:55,830 --> 00:02:57,520 as you can see, 10 seconds. 54 00:02:57,544 --> 00:02:59,324 (Laughter) 55 00:02:59,348 --> 00:03:02,871 (Applause) 56 00:03:03,336 --> 00:03:07,792 Really, more like 200 hours, 250 hours for something that size. 57 00:03:07,816 --> 00:03:10,798 But I've been drawing ever since I could hold a crayon, really. 58 00:03:10,822 --> 00:03:12,735 My mom was an artist, and growing up, 59 00:03:12,759 --> 00:03:15,245 we always had art supplies all over the house. 60 00:03:15,269 --> 00:03:17,822 My mother's love of photography 61 00:03:17,846 --> 00:03:21,381 propelled her to the most remote regions of the Earth, 62 00:03:21,405 --> 00:03:23,811 and my family and I were fortunate enough 63 00:03:23,835 --> 00:03:26,536 to join and support her on these adventures. 64 00:03:27,139 --> 00:03:29,847 We rode camels in Northern Africa 65 00:03:29,871 --> 00:03:32,918 and mushed on dog sleds near the North Pole. 66 00:03:33,871 --> 00:03:38,067 In August of 2012, I led my first expedition, 67 00:03:38,091 --> 00:03:42,605 taking a group of artists and scholars up the northwest coast of Greenland. 68 00:03:44,232 --> 00:03:47,122 My mother was originally supposed to lead this trip. 69 00:03:47,146 --> 00:03:49,861 She and I were in the early stages of planning, 70 00:03:49,885 --> 00:03:52,447 as we had intended to go together, 71 00:03:52,471 --> 00:03:55,146 when she fell victim to a brain tumor. 72 00:03:55,812 --> 00:03:59,809 The cancer quickly took over her body and mind, 73 00:03:59,833 --> 00:04:02,380 and she passed away six months later. 74 00:04:03,110 --> 00:04:05,095 During the months of her illness, though, 75 00:04:05,119 --> 00:04:10,619 her dedication to the expedition never wavered, and I made a promise 76 00:04:10,643 --> 00:04:12,508 to carry out her final journey. 77 00:04:13,374 --> 00:04:16,517 My mother's passion for the Arctic 78 00:04:16,541 --> 00:04:19,914 echoed through my experience in Greenland, 79 00:04:19,938 --> 00:04:22,914 and I felt the power 80 00:04:22,938 --> 00:04:25,488 and the fragility of the landscape. 81 00:04:26,738 --> 00:04:29,398 The sheer size of the icebergs 82 00:04:29,422 --> 00:04:30,826 is humbling. 83 00:04:31,168 --> 00:04:34,591 The ice fields are alive with movement and sound 84 00:04:34,615 --> 00:04:36,752 in a way that I never expected. 85 00:04:37,284 --> 00:04:39,532 I expanded the scale of my compositions 86 00:04:39,556 --> 00:04:44,317 to give you that same sense of awe that I experienced. 87 00:04:45,021 --> 00:04:48,716 Yet, while the grandeur of the ice is evident, 88 00:04:48,740 --> 00:04:50,676 so, too, is its vulnerability. 89 00:04:51,042 --> 00:04:52,257 From our boat, 90 00:04:52,281 --> 00:04:57,645 I could see the ice sweating under the unseasonably warm sun. 91 00:04:58,940 --> 00:05:02,503 We had a chance to visit many of the Inuit communities in Greenland 92 00:05:02,527 --> 00:05:05,357 that now face huge challenges. 93 00:05:05,381 --> 00:05:08,697 The locals spoke to me of vast areas of sea ice 94 00:05:08,721 --> 00:05:11,407 that are no longer freezing over as they once did. 95 00:05:11,431 --> 00:05:14,509 And without ice, their hunting and harvesting grounds 96 00:05:14,533 --> 00:05:16,295 are severely diminished, 97 00:05:16,319 --> 00:05:19,160 threatening their way of life and survival. 98 00:05:20,616 --> 00:05:22,511 The melting glaciers in Greenland 99 00:05:22,535 --> 00:05:26,879 are one of the largest contributing factors to rising sea levels, 100 00:05:26,903 --> 00:05:29,019 which have already begun to drown 101 00:05:29,043 --> 00:05:31,873 some of our world's lowest-lying islands. 102 00:05:32,942 --> 00:05:36,458 One year after my trip to Greenland, I visited the Maldives, 103 00:05:37,145 --> 00:05:40,352 the lowest and flattest country in the entire world. 104 00:05:40,752 --> 00:05:44,785 While I was there, I collected images and inspiration 105 00:05:44,809 --> 00:05:46,510 for a new body of work: 106 00:05:47,072 --> 00:05:51,105 drawings of waves lapping on the coast of a nation 107 00:05:51,129 --> 00:05:55,283 that could be entirely underwater within this century. 108 00:05:57,484 --> 00:06:01,027 Devastating events happen every day 109 00:06:01,051 --> 00:06:04,299 on scales both global and personal. 110 00:06:04,844 --> 00:06:06,107 When I was in Greenland, 111 00:06:06,131 --> 00:06:10,045 I scattered my mother's ashes amidst the melting ice. 112 00:06:10,743 --> 00:06:15,830 Now she remains a part of the landscape she loved so much, 113 00:06:15,854 --> 00:06:19,941 even as it, too, passes and takes on new form. 114 00:06:21,095 --> 00:06:23,863 Among the many gifts my mother gave me 115 00:06:23,887 --> 00:06:26,887 was the ability to focus on the positive, 116 00:06:26,911 --> 00:06:28,434 rather than the negative. 117 00:06:29,083 --> 00:06:35,164 My drawings celebrate the beauty of what we all stand to lose. 118 00:06:35,845 --> 00:06:41,639 I hope they can serve as records of sublime landscapes in flux, 119 00:06:41,663 --> 00:06:46,285 documenting the transition and inspiring our global community 120 00:06:46,309 --> 00:06:48,427 to take action for the future. 121 00:06:49,102 --> 00:06:50,309 Thank you. 122 00:06:50,333 --> 00:06:56,484 (Applause)