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  1. In a body of work entitled “Intolerable Beauty: Portraits of American Mass Consumption,” Jordan visited landfills and recycling centers to photograph vast piles of discarded products such as cell phones, chargers, circuit boards, crushed cars, glass bottles and other consumer goods.

  2. Cellphones #2, Atlanta, 2005 44x90. Chris Jordan Photographic Arts In Katrina's Wake Ushirikiano (Kenya) Seattle Street Studies Intolerable Beauty Running the Numbers Midway Artist Statement Beauty Emerging/Belleza Desesperada Beauty Emerging/Thirteen Moons Beauty Emerging/Peripillan Beauty Emerging/Formations Beauty Emerging/In Wildness Beauty Emerging/Waveforms Beauty Emerging/Sumava Film ...

  3. Artist(s): Chris Jordan Project Description Beautiful photo images depict piles of the not so beautiful remains of mass consumption, serving as visual reminders of the roles we all play in America’s unsustainable culture.

  4. Site: Chris Jordan's homepage Intolerable Beauty. TED Speaker. Chris Jordan runs the numbers on modern American life — making large-format, long-zoom artwork from the most mindblowing data about our stuff. Why you should listen. Photographer Chris Jordan trains his eye on American consumption.

  5. 18 de abr. de 2011 · Su pasión por la conservación del medio ambiente ha generado mucha atención en la sociedad, llevándole a editar varios libros (Intolerable Beauty, In Katrina´s Wake y Running the Numbers). Podéis ver más trabajos de Chris Jordan en su página web .

  6. Jordan's work can be grouped in the following series: Intolerable Beauty: Portraits of American Mass Consumption (2003–2006) – A series of large format photographs depicting the magnitude of America's waste and consumption.

  7. 15 de jul. de 2009 · Photographer Chris Jordan describes the photos in his series “Intolerable Beauty: Portraits of American Mass Consumption” as his “first foray into being an engaged artist.” Cell phones #2, Atlanta, 2005. "The idea [behind this series] was to capture the scale of [our] mass consumption.