Running the Numbers
A photographic series makes sense of the incomprehensible
Utne Reader September / October 2007
Julie Hanus Utne Reader
Where does your mind go when someone starts spewing statistics? When was the last time a cold, hard number moved people to tears or inspired action? If the nightly news reports a 0.5 percent increase in unemployment or that a portion of the population has gone bankrupt, does anyone really stop to consider how many people that represents? How many lives have been radically altered?
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According to the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists (May/June 2007), recent research done at the University of Oregon suggests that we are unable to 'care' about massive numbers, especially in the case of chronic human atrocities. As death tolls increase or hospitals fill up, our sensitivity to additional stimuli decreases, just as a single voice noticeably changes the volume of a small group but makes no difference in a crowd. The effect is what Paul Slovic, professor of psychology at Oregon, calls 'psychological numbing.' The reflex that kicks information toward the feeling part of our brain simply shuts down.
Photographic artist Chris Jordan offers one solution to statistics-induced apathy in his precise new series, Running the Numbers: An American Self-Portrait. Jordan takes the mind-boggling data that define U.S. culture--the billions spent in Iraq, the number of Americans behind bars--and creates emblematic images to use as an organizing principle: a note of currency, a folded prison uniform. Then, by shrinking, arranging, and digitally knitting these icons to create vast photographic prints that tell their own stories, he's able to humanize the overwhelming.
In 'Cans Seurat,' Jordan reproduces 106,000 aluminum beverage cans (the number discarded in the United States every 30 seconds) to fill up a 60- by 92-inch version of Georges Seurat's 'A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte,' which functions as a commentary on portion packaging. 'Paper Bags' features 1.14 million brown sacks, the number used in the United States every hour, stacked 5 feet tall in columns reminiscent of tree trunks. The images are obviously manipulated, but they evoke hyperrealism. 'Even if the most conscientious person wanted to go and look at all the barrels of oil that we consume in the United States in a single day, there's nowhere to go and see that,' Jordan says. 'It's spread out in society--this incredibly complex, invisible process--and there's nowhere to go see the cumulative effect.'
In a previous series, Intolerable Beauty, Jordan sought out piles of detritus (seas of discarded cell phones, crushed automobiles) in an effort to document the impact of our collective consumption. The images were breathtaking, but when he showed them, Jordan ended up having to rely on raw statistics to give context to the work. Running the Numbers is his attempt to go deeper, each print making visible the very real sums and totals that we'd otherwise never see.