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Rising Tide exhibition by Kadir van Lohuizen at the Museum of the City of New York

Kadir van Lohuizen, New York from the marshes around the Hackensack River in New Jersey, 2018

@ © Kadir van Lohuizen / NOOR

Fri, Apr 16 - Thu, Mar 31  2022

Museum of the City of New York

The Museum of the City of New York will present Rising Tide: Visualizing the Human Costs of the Climate Crisis, an exhibition with work by Kadir van Lohuizen. The exhibition will be on view from April 15, 2021 until spring 2022.

Rising sea levels affect us all. In Rising Tide: Visualizing the Human Costs of the Climate Crisis, Dutch documentary photographer Kadir van Lohuizen illustrates the dramatic consequences of climate change across the world through photographs, video, drone images, and sound. Experience the effects of rising sea levels in Greenland, Bangladesh, Papua New Guinea, Kiribati, Fiji, Amsterdam, Panama, Miami, and our own neighborhoods here in New York City.

This exhibition also marks the U.S. launch of van Lohuizen’s new book, After Us The Deluge: The Human Consequences of Rising Sea Levels.

This presentation is based on the exhibition of the same title that opened in October 2019 at Het Scheepvaartmuseum, the Dutch National Maritime Museum.

This exhibition is a collaboration between the Museum of the City of New York, The National Maritime Museum in the Netherlands, and NOOR.

Rising Tide is co-presented by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution.

Opening Event (online)

Online conversation Rising Tide: Visualizing the Human Costs of the Climate Crisis

Conversation to take place on Thursday, April 15, 2021, 12:00pm.  Free, but registration is required. Follow this link to register for the Rising Tide conversation.

To mark Earth Day 2021, the 51st anniversary of an international holiday recognizing the importance of environmental protection, we find ourselves in a world radically altered by a climate crisis. Dutch documentary photographer Kadir van Lohuizen’s work illustrates the effects of the climate crisis in locations throughout the world, including New York City. His work will be on view at the Museum this spring in our new exhibition, Rising Tide: Visualizing the Human Costs of Climate Crisis. In this opening event, Van Lohuizen sits down for a virtual conversation about the local and global impacts of the climate crisis with Henk Ovink, Dutch Special Envoy for International Water Affairs, and Bangladeshi environmental activist Sharif Jamil. Moderated by Anne Barnard of The New York Times.

This event marks the U.S. launch of van Lohuizen’s new book, After Us The Deluge: The Human Consequences of Rising Sea Levels.

Portraits of two women and three men

Kadir van Lohuizen, Henk Ovink, Sharif Jamil, Anne Barnard. Image courtesy of the Museum of the City of New York

About the Speakers

Sharif Jamil is known as the Buriganga Riverkeeper. As the head of Waterkeepers Bangladesh, he is one of Bangladesh’s most outspoken and impassioned environmental advocates. Jamil leads a country-wide campaign to avert an environmental catastrophe for the country’s 165 million people, who are already suffering the effects of climate change and sea-level rise more than any other people on earth.

Henk Ovink is the Special Envoy for International Water Affairs, Kingdom of The Netherlands and Sherpa to the High Level Panel on Water. As the Ambassador for Water, he is responsible for advocating water awareness around the world, building institutional capacity and coalitions amongst governments, multilateral organizations, private sector and NGO’s, and initiating innovate approaches to address the world’s stressing needs on water. Ovink served on President Obama’s Hurricane Sandy Rebuilding Task Force and teaches at Harvard GSD, the London School of Economics, and the University of Groningen.

Kadir van Lohuizen is an award-winning photojournalist. He has covered conflicts in Africa and elsewhere, but is probably best known for his long-term projects on the seven rivers of the world, the rising of sea levels, the diamond industry, and migration in the Americas. Recent projects include “Rising Tide,” which looks at the global consequences of rising sea levels caused by climate change, and “Wasteland” that investigates how six megacities manage (or mismanage) their waste. In 2018, van Lohuizen and Yuri Kozyrev were the laureates of the 9th Prix Carmignac for Photojournalism and undertook a yearlong expedition through the Arctic to document the consequences of the climate crisis.

Kirsty Tinto is an Associate Research Scientist in the polar geophysics group at Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University. She works with interdisciplinary teams to understand the processes controlling ice sheet change, with a particular interest in the interactions between the cryosphere and the underlying landscape and geology. She has spent the last 10 years working with airborne surveys of Greenland and Antarctica, and is currently investigating the varied effects of sea level changes in different localities.

Anne Barnard (moderator) covers climate and environment at The New York Times, focusing on the New York area. Previously, as Beirut bureau chief, she led coverage of the Syria war for six years, reporting across the Middle East from 2012 to 2018. Since 9/11, she has chronicled the human and strategic impact of U.S. war policies, reporting from front line areas including Iraq, Syria, Gaza, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iran, Lebanon, and exploring global issues at home. Barnard has worked in the Middle East on and off since 2003, beginning at the Boston Globe in Baghdad, where she covered the American invasion and occupation of Iraq.

Free, but registration is required. Follow this link to register for the Rising Tide conversation.

DutchCulture USA