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Decadenza - Dekadenz - abandoned thinks - decadencia
Decadenza - Dekadenz - abandoned thinks - decadencia
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Colors from the Sea
Pelham Bay Park, Bronx, NY
This striking collage of plastic debris was created from flotsam that had washed ashore. When the various items were put together, they created a fractured mosaic with colors still vivid and forms stubbornly intact. Among the items was a smiley face that lost its color from its scouring passage through salt, sun, and time. As looks are deceiving, its smile is without joy thanks to a society that created permanence without considering the potential consequences.
What should have been a pristine, natural shoreline became an unintentional gallery of art consisting of bottles, fragments, and warped shapes. Each piece carries a quiet biography: a moment of convenience, a careless discard and the reflection of a system that prioritized immediacy over stewardship resulting in unmanageable levels of garbage. It does not matter that each fragment holds a distinct story.
The persistence of these materials is indictment of our ways and a testament that the sea, typically a force of erasure and renewal has become an unwilling archivist – returning what it cannot break down. These items do not fade as driftwood nor dissolve as organic matter. They remain unchanged and unyielding. They pollute the environment and endanger fragile ecosystems.
Because of this, Pelham Bay Park's shoreline presents a record of disconnection between our actions and their consequences and our unsustainable consumption and its adverse costs. It demonstrates that sustainability and responsibility are not a part of the human footprint. What we carelessly throw away does not simply disappear.
_______

Disruption of the Expected
This photo (taken on 9 April 2026) captures a discarded plush fox toy and a purple scrunchie that had been washed up by the sea, also at Pelham Bay Park.
This scene tells the heart-breaking story of sudden rejection that had followed a quiet and gradual transition from "treasure" to "trash." The presence of the toy and the hair accessory suggests a shared origin – likely that of a young girl who had spent time in or around the waters of Pelham Bay Park.
There is a poignant irony in the fox’s position – a creature designed for the wild is now back in a "natural" setting, yet it looks more out of place than ever because of its manufactured origins. At the same time, the narrative here is one of intentional abandonment. Both items now sit in a state of "urban suchness" – simply existing as vibrant, man-made relics slowly being reclaimed by the textures of the earth while in this singular moment in time they still document the “unseen” life of the city.
This image also portrays three distinct layers of life – the natural – neutral and indifferent; the mimicry – a human attempt to replicate the natural world; and the absolute synthetic – the purple scrunchie makes no attempt to blend in drawing the focus away from the natural and mimicry to force acknowledgement of the human presence and its intrusion.
Note: The narratives were co-written with Gemini AI (Google®).
This striking collage of plastic debris was created from flotsam that had washed ashore. When the various items were put together, they created a fractured mosaic with colors still vivid and forms stubbornly intact. Among the items was a smiley face that lost its color from its scouring passage through salt, sun, and time. As looks are deceiving, its smile is without joy thanks to a society that created permanence without considering the potential consequences.
What should have been a pristine, natural shoreline became an unintentional gallery of art consisting of bottles, fragments, and warped shapes. Each piece carries a quiet biography: a moment of convenience, a careless discard and the reflection of a system that prioritized immediacy over stewardship resulting in unmanageable levels of garbage. It does not matter that each fragment holds a distinct story.
The persistence of these materials is indictment of our ways and a testament that the sea, typically a force of erasure and renewal has become an unwilling archivist – returning what it cannot break down. These items do not fade as driftwood nor dissolve as organic matter. They remain unchanged and unyielding. They pollute the environment and endanger fragile ecosystems.
Because of this, Pelham Bay Park's shoreline presents a record of disconnection between our actions and their consequences and our unsustainable consumption and its adverse costs. It demonstrates that sustainability and responsibility are not a part of the human footprint. What we carelessly throw away does not simply disappear.
_______

Disruption of the Expected
This photo (taken on 9 April 2026) captures a discarded plush fox toy and a purple scrunchie that had been washed up by the sea, also at Pelham Bay Park.
This scene tells the heart-breaking story of sudden rejection that had followed a quiet and gradual transition from "treasure" to "trash." The presence of the toy and the hair accessory suggests a shared origin – likely that of a young girl who had spent time in or around the waters of Pelham Bay Park.
There is a poignant irony in the fox’s position – a creature designed for the wild is now back in a "natural" setting, yet it looks more out of place than ever because of its manufactured origins. At the same time, the narrative here is one of intentional abandonment. Both items now sit in a state of "urban suchness" – simply existing as vibrant, man-made relics slowly being reclaimed by the textures of the earth while in this singular moment in time they still document the “unseen” life of the city.
This image also portrays three distinct layers of life – the natural – neutral and indifferent; the mimicry – a human attempt to replicate the natural world; and the absolute synthetic – the purple scrunchie makes no attempt to blend in drawing the focus away from the natural and mimicry to force acknowledgement of the human presence and its intrusion.
Note: The narratives were co-written with Gemini AI (Google®).
sea-herdorf, E. Adam G., Kalli, Pat Del and 60 other people have particularly liked this photo
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Merci de nous montrer cette réalité à ne pas occulter.
Freundliche Grüße und eine angenehme Woche
Erich
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