An American Self-Portrait


This new series looks at contemporary American culture through the austere lens of statistics. Each image portrays a specific quantity of something: fifteen million sheets of office paper (five minutes of paper use); 106,000 aluminum cans (thirty seconds of can consumption) and so on. My hope is that images representing these quantities might have a different effect than the raw numbers alone, such as we find daily in articles and books. Statistics can feel abstract and anesthetizing, making it difficult to connect with and make meaning of 3.6 million SUV sales in one year, for example, or 2.3 million Americans in prison, or 426,000 cell phones retired every day. This project visually examines these vast and bizarre measures of our society, in large intricately detailed prints assembled from thousands of smaller photographs.
CLAY SHIRKY — Second Life released a bunch of figures last Friday, including the cumulative number of users, as part of their “effort to drive toward complete transparency and openness”, as they put it. I’ve been critical of Linden Lab’s population figures in the past. And it turns out I was right, about all of it.









