Sickeningly beautiful rotten food

Sickeningly beautiful rotten food

Categories: Art | Culture | Food and Drinks | News | Photo project | Photo School

Sickeningly beautiful rotten food

1. The photo project is called "One Third" - that's how much food produced around the world is thrown away. And in wealthier countries like the US, about 40 percent of the food, which is worth an estimated $165 billion, ends up in trash cans. In the photo: rotten strawberries. (Photo: Klaus Pichler).

Sickeningly beautiful rotten food

2. An Austrian photographer studied rotting food in detail for nine months to create a laboratory of rotting food in his bathroom: a decomposing chicken, moldy noodles, etc. Photo: chicken. (Photo: Klaus Pichler).

Sickeningly beautiful rotten food

3. And then what he managed to grow in his home "rotting lab", Klaus photographed as luxury items, which in a world where people are starving, they really are. Photo: bananas. (Photo: Klaus Pichler).

Sickeningly beautiful rotten food

4. “I decided to make food look like the expensive ones we see in ads, because food is really a luxury, especially when you compare the situation with the availability of food in our industrialized part of the world with underdeveloped countries,” Klaus Pichler explains the idea of \u200b\u200bcreating photo project "One third". Photo: bread. (Photo: Klaus Pichler).

Sickeningly beautiful rotten food

5. The photographer hopes that viewers will think twice before buying more products than they need after viewing this series of photographs. Photo: chili pepper. (Photo: Klaus Pichler).

Sickeningly beautiful rotten food

6. The photographer used the effect of strong contrast between what the first impression these photographs create and how the audience feels when they finally understand what is actually depicted in them. Pictured: carrots. (Photo: Klaus Pichler).

Sickeningly beautiful rotten food

7. On his website, under each photo, the author posted information about the price of this product, where and how it was grown, how many kilometers he had to travel to get into Klaus' refrigerator, how much carbon dioxide was released into the atmosphere as a result of its production and transportation, as well as how much water was used. He did this so that the photos were not just something abstract, but showed the real size of wasted resources. Photo: corn. (Photo: Klaus Pichler).

Sickeningly beautiful rotten food

8. To find all the data that the photographer posted under the photos, he had to do almost a real investigation. The salespeople didn't want to give him that kind of information, so Klaus had to sneak to the back of the store where the goods were being unloaded to take pictures of the shipping labels on the crates, and then call the distributors, pretending to be a demanding customer who wants to know absolutely everything about the product. Photo: eggs. (Photo: Klaus Pichler).

Sickeningly beautiful rotten food

9. In total, Klaus "rotted" and photographed 55 different foods, ranging from bread and milk to desserts. Pictured: lettuce. (Photo: Klaus Pichler).

Sickeningly beautiful rotten food

10. After spending almost a year on a project dedicated to rotten food, the photographer, according to him, changed his attitude towards food. Now he buys food from local growers and organic farmers and doesn't throw it away anymore. In the photo: fruit cocktail. (Photo: Klaus Pichler).

Sickeningly beautiful rotten food

11. Exhibitions of Klaus Pichler's photo project "One Third" were held throughout Europe, including at the UN. Photo: jelly. (Photo: Klaus Pichler).

Sickeningly beautiful rotten food

12. Lemons. (Photo: Klaus Pichler).

Sickeningly beautiful rotten food

13. Watermelon. (Photo: Klaus Pichler).

Sickeningly beautiful rotten food

14. Milk. (Photo: Klaus Pichler).

Sickeningly beautiful rotten food

15. Oranges. (Photo: Klaus Pichler).

Sickeningly beautiful rotten food

16. Pineapple. (Photo: Klaus Pichler).

Sickeningly beautiful rotten food

17. Potatoes. (Photo: Klaus Pichler).

Sickeningly beautiful rotten food

18. Red cabbage. (Photo: Klaus Pichler).

Sickeningly beautiful rotten food

19. Fig. (Photo: Klaus Pichler).

Sickeningly beautiful rotten food

20. Tomatoes. (Photo: Klaus Pichler).

The rest of the rotten products from the One Third photo project can be viewed on the photographer's website: kpic.at.

Keywords: ROTTEN FOOD | FOOD | SPASTED FOOD | LUXURIOUS FOOD

Post News Article

Recent articles

What does the most inconvenient store in the world look like?
What does the most inconvenient store in the world look like?

For a retail outlet to be in demand, it must be conveniently located, offer a wide range of goods and a decent level of service. Or ...

Stripped and driven into the paint
Stripped and driven into the paint

Steve Hanks is the most famous American artist working in watercolor technique. The works of this master are incredibly realistic. ...

Dark stories in the paintings of Jeff Christensen
Dark stories in the paintings of Jeff Christensen

American artist from Utah Jeff Christensen (Jeff Christensen) paints oil paintings in the style of surrealism. His canvases are not ...

Related articles

All the luxury of Georgian cuisine, or "Full mtsvadi you, Genatsvale!"
All the luxury of Georgian cuisine, or "Full mtsvadi you, ...

Hospitable Georgians are known for their abundant feasts — then I like to eat. And if you lose weight, Georgia is not for you. ...

Tell me what you drink: a products, relieving from hangover, depending on the type of alcohol
Tell me what you drink: a products, relieving from hangover, ...

Comes before Christmas, and that means office parties and a fun party is not far off. The festive mood darkens only the thought of ...

12 myths about survival that pose a real danger
12 myths about survival that pose a real danger

There is no shortage of advice on how to survive in extreme situations these days. Numerous television shows, movies, specialized ...