We Have to Count the Clouds | 2011-present
The Hottest Day, Wall Street Journal , 2011
National Weather Service Office, New Braunfels, TX, 2013
We Have to Count the Clouds (four by six), 2012
Rain Gage, 2012
Anemometer Record, Blue Hill Meteorological Observatory, 2012
First and Last Killing (frost), 2012
Jack Foster and his Backyard Weather Station, Eskridge, KS, 2016
Backyard Weather Station, Eskridge, KS, 2016
Sunshine Card, 2012
Sun and Smoke, Idaho, 2016
Doppler Radar, National Weather Service Office, New Braunfels, TX, 2014
Desktop, Blue Hill Observatory, 2013
Weather Balloon, 2012
After Wildfire, Bastrop, TX, 2012
Great Salt Lake, 2016
Weather Station, Kansas, 2017
Shadow of Rain Gage over Blueberry Patch, Blue Hill, 2013
Professor Lee R. Skabelund, Kansas State University, 2016
Cloud Types, Scribner's Wonderworld of Science, published 1946, 2017
Erosion, Aquinnah, MA, 2018
Lake Travis (low water), 2013
Flood Gage, Mississippi River, 2016
Levee, New Orleans East, 2015
Barometer, 2012
Windsock, Galveston, 2015
Drought Experiment, Kansas State University, 2017
Debris from 2011 Mississippi Flood, Old River Control Structure, 2015
Doppler Radar, Wabaunsee County, KS
Servers, National Weather Servers, 2012
Levee, New Orleans, 2015
Blue Hill Meteorological Observatory, 2014
We Have to Count the Clouds | 2011-Present
In the series We Have to Count the Clouds, photographs function as evidence of the ways we comprehend and mediate our relationship to both daily weather and our changing climate. In looking closely at the marks that are made–in the prediction of weather, the tracking of meteorological data, as well as on the landscape and human body itself–the work presents visual remnants of often-invisible forces.
I seek out the permanent traces of what is sometimes hard to see, hard for some to believe. Wondering what proof looks like, I find these marks in weather stations, in the form of a graph or handwritten climatological record. The landscape shows evidence as well–cracked earth, flood debris, charred trees, erosion. Other indicators, immediate and often temporary, like sunburn or goose bumps, appear on the human body. Promising protection, the built environment of levees, floodgates, and sirens have become monuments to our vulnerability.