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I consider it my life's mission
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to convey the urgency
of climate change through my work.
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I've traveled north to the Arctic
to the capture the unfolding story
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of polar melt,
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and south to the Equator to document
the subsequent rising seas.
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Most recently, I visited
the icy coast of Greenland
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and the low-lying islands of the Maldives,
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connecting two seemingly disparate
but equally endangered
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parts of our planet.
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My drawings explore moments
of transition, turbulence
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and tranquility in the landscape,
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allowing viewers to emotionally connect
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with a place you might never
have the chance to visit.
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I choose to convey the beauty
as opposed to the devastation.
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If you can experience the sublimity
of these landscapes,
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perhaps you'll be inspired
to protect and preserve them.
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Behavioral psychology tells us
that we take action
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and make decisions based
on our emotions above all else.
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And studies have shown
that art impacts our emotions
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more effectively than a scary news report.
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Experts predict ice-free Arctic summers
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as early as 2020.
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And sea levels are likely to rise
between two and ten feet
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by century's end.
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I have dedicated my career
to illuminating these projections
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with an accessible medium,
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one that moves us in a way
that statistics may not.
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My process begins
with traveling to the places
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at the forefront of climate change.
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On-site, I take thousands of photographs.
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Back in the studio,
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I work from both my memory
of the experience and the photographs
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to create very large-scale compositions,
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sometimes over 10 feet wide.
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I draw with soft pastel, which is dry
like charcoal, but colors.
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I consider my work drawings
but others call them painting.
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I cringe, though, when I'm referred to
as a "finger painter."
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(Laughter)
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But I don't use any tools
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and I have always used
my fingers and palms
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to manipulate the pigment on the paper.
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Drawing is a form of meditation for me.
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It quiets my mind.
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I don't perceive what I'm drawing
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as ice or water.
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Instead, the image is stripped down
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to its most basic form of color and shape.
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Once the piece is complete,
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I can finally experience
the composition as a whole,
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as an iceberg floating
through glassy water,
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or a wave cresting with foam.
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On average, a piece this size
takes me about,
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as you can see, 10 seconds.
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(Laughter)
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(Applause)
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Really, more like 200 hours,
250 hours for something that size.
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But I've been drawing ever since
I could hold a crayon, really.
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My mom was an artist, and growing up,
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we always had art supplies
all over the house.
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My mother's love of photography
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propelled her to the most
remote regions of the earth,
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and my family and I were fortunate enough
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to join and support her
on these adventures.
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We rode camels in Northern Africa
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and mushed on dog sleds
near the North Pole.
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In August of 2012,
I led my first expedition,
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taking a group of artists and scholars
up the northwest coast of Greenland.
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My mother was originally
supposed to lead this trip.
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She and I were in the early
stages of planning,
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as we had intended to go together,
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when she fell victim to a brain tumor.
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The cancer quickly took over
her body and mind,
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and she passed away six months later.
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During the months of her illness, though,
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her dedication to the expedition
never wavered, and I made a promise
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to carry out her final journey.
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My mother's passion for the Arctic
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echoed through my experience in Greenland,
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and I felt the power
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and the fragility of the landscape.
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The sheer size of the icebergs
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is humbling.
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The ice fields are alive
with movement and sound
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in a way that I never expected.
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I expanded the scale of my compositions
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to give you that same sense of awe
that I experienced.
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Yet, while the grandeur
of the ice is evident,
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so, too, is its vulnerability.
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From our boat,
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I could see the ice sweating
under the unseasonably warm sun.
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We had a chance to visit
many of the Inuit communities in Greenland
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that now face huge challenges.
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The locals spoke to me
of vast areas of sea ice
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that are no longer
freezing over as they once did.
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And without ice, their hunting
and harvesting grounds
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are severely diminished,
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threatening their way
of life and survival.
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The melting glaciers in Greenland
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are one of the largest
contributing factors to rising sea levels,
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which have already begun to drown
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some of our world's lowest-lying islands.
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One year after my trip to Greenland,
I visited the Maldives,
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the lowest and flattest country
in the entire world.
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While I was there, I collected
images and inspiration
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for a new body of work:
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drawings of waves lapping
on the coast of a nation
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that could be entirely underwater
within this century.
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Devastating events happen every day
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on scales both global and personal.
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When I was in Greenland,
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I scattered my mother's ashes
amidst the melting ice.
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Now she remains a part
of the landscape she loved so much,
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even as it, too, passes
and takes on new form.
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Among the many gifts my mother gave me
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was the ability to focus on the positive,
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rather than the negative.
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My drawings celebrate the beauty
of what we all stand to lose.
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I hope they can serve as records
of sublime landscapes in flux,
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documenting the transition
and inspiring our global community
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to take action for the future.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)