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  1. Chris Jordan est un artiste américain, né en 1963 à San Francisco. Artiste engagé, il vit à Seattle, dans l'État de Washington.

  2. magical mysterious evocative photo of a shipwreck. Javi Te Amo (the Wreck of the Lord Lonsdale), Punta Arenas, Chile, 2022; archival color pigment on watercolor paper; 13x20" (33x51cm); Open edition. Website of artist Chris Jordan.

  3. Learn more about Chris Jordan, including the inspiration behind his Midway project and his ongoing Running the Numbers series, in this TED talk. Jordan returned to the Midway Islands to create a powerful documentary film, which can be viewed at the Albatross film website.

  4. 20 juin 2023 · La photo étonnante qui a changé la perception du monde sur la crise du plastique. Les photos prises en 2009 par Chris Jordan de poussins d'albatros morts avec du plastique dans l'estomac sont...

  5. Chris Jordan est un artiste américain, né en 1963 à San Francisco. Artiste engagé, il vit à Seattle, dans l'État de Washington.

  6. 3 juin 2023 · Chris Jordan's photos of dead albatross chicks with plastic in their guts went viral. Over a decade later, Anna Turns looks at how it changed our response to the plastics crisis.

  7. Chris Jordan, a fast bowler with a level-headed calmness and a fearsome yorker, found his niche as a death specialist in T20 cricket for England after initially breaking through as a bowling ...

  8. Chris Jordan (born 1963) is an American artist, photographer and film producer based in Seattle, Washington. [1]

  9. Chris Jordan Curriculum Vitae. SOLO EXHIBITS 2022 Lianzhou Photography Museum, Lianzhou International Photo Festival, China, curated by Moritz Neumuller COP28 United Arab Emirates, Abu Dabhi, United Arab Emirates, curated by Nezar Andary 2019 Sungkok Art Museum, Seoul, South Korea; traveled to six more museums across S Korea Southern Utah ...

  10. Photographer Chris Jordan trains his eye on American consumption. His 2003-05 series "Intolerable Beauty" examines the hypnotic allure of the sheer amount of stuff we make and consume every day: cliffs of baled scrap, small cities of shipping containers, endless grids of mass-produced goods.