Corals play an integral part in marine ecosystems, as they function as hotspots for nurturing biodiversity underwater, sometimes supporting thousands of different species. Corals also act to protect coastal areas, as they can soften the impact of incoming tidal waves, which in the long run can help coastal ecosystems and human communities weather out the worst effects of climate change.
Unfortunately, since 1950 we’ve lost about half of the world’s coral reefs due to a constellation of factors, including human-driven pollution, destructive fishing practices, as well as rising sea levels, increased ocean surface temperatures, ocean acidification, and changes to ocean currents and storm patterns. All of these elements combine to cause the phenomenon known as coral bleaching, where tiny algal organisms called zooxanthellae, which live on the coral skeleton in a symbiotic relationship, are expelled off due to these environmental stressors.
What’s left is a coral skeleton that looks starkly white—still living but stripped of its colorful algal guests. It’s a sad and solemn image, one that artists like Rogan Brown attempt to capture in intricate, multi-layered sculptures made out of paper.
Brown’s elaborately detailed work is inspired by the “narratives of scientific discovery and innovation,” while expressing itself in the delicate and ephemeral medium of paper. As Brown explains:
To that end, Brown says his art pieces are grounded in a lot of research, both from a scientific and artistic perspective:
Often, Brown uses hand-operated tools like a sharp scalpel knife to painstakingly cut out his large-scale works, which can often take months to create. But in conjunction with these simple tools, he also strives to push his work further with the help of machines like laser cutters, which was also used with his latest series pictured here, titled “Ghost Coral.”
This particular piece took about three months to create and involves hundreds of individual elements, from many sheets of carefully hand- and laser-cut paper, as well as their hidden supports. Brown doesn’t use colored paper and rather chooses to hand-paint the components to create a much more nuanced contrast between the somber whiteness of the bleached coral hemming in on the last remaining vibrancy of healthy coral at the center.
While “Ghost Coral” might speak to the distressing phenomenon of coral bleaching, Brown says that his other new work, called “Coral Garden,” attempts to portray the more hopeful directions that marine conservation is currently taking:
The superpowers of such “super corals” are highlighted by the shiny bubbles that Brown has chosen to envelop them in, even as they are surrounded by weakened and palely blighted corals.
While it may be too early to know if transplanting heat-resistant “super corals” will help other degraded coral reefs rebound, Brown says it’s important for people who see such worrying images to go beyond merely witnessing and to proceed to action:
To check out more of Rogan Brown’s work, visit his website.