American Photo Magazine
  • Browse Full Site
    • Most Recent
    • Landscapes
    • Portfolios
    • Books
    • Street Photography
    • The Internet
    • On the Wall
    • Studio Work
    • Model Shoot
  • Subscribe
  • Contact
  • Newsletter
  • Digital Editions
    • iPad
    • Kindle
    • Nook
    • Zinio
  • RSS

Hungary's Thick Red Line

Spanish photographer Palíndromo Mészáros documented the effects of a massive toxic aluminum spill in Hungary

  • By Dan Abbe on July 10, 2012
  • 0 Comments
    • Tweet
Expand

From "The Line I: The Dive"

© Palíndromo Mészáros

  • prev
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • …
  • next

A few months ago, Richard Mosse's photographs of the Democratic Republic of Congo became quite popular because the infrared color film he used made the landscape a brilliant shade of purple. Spanish photographer Palíndromo Mészáros has produced photographs with a similarly unnatural hue, but the red that dominates his work "The Line" isn't caused by his camera setup. His work documents the aftermath of a 2010 toxic waste spill in Western Hungary, which killed nine people and forced the evacuation of thousands. The material, released from an aluminum factory, has left a permanent mark on the villages in its path. Mészáros made a pair of supervised visits to the site in order to document the effects of the spill. He says that, officially, everything has gone back to normal, in that people have returned to their homes, and the government has constructed a number of public housing units for people whose homes were destroyed. Naturally, though, many of the residents still fear for their safety.

Mészáros' photographs don't show any of these residents, but instead focuses on the very visual effect that the spill has had on the landscape. It's quite clear to see exactly where the toxic sludge reached up the side of buildings, and even trees. The red hue of aluminum byproducts makes for a somewhat surreal landscape. In this way, his photos could be compared not only to Mosse's, but also to those we featured by Thai photographer Miti Ruangkritya, who documented the effect of floods on Bangkok. In each case, although the landscape has been completely altered by something external, the photographs themselves remain calm, almost stately.

Like Ruangkritya, Mészáros told me via email that he was motivated to take photographs that would look different from the images that had appeared in the media. "I always want to know what remains when the news is no longer 'new' anymore," he said. "The story gets forgotten by the media. An approach different from this traditional one seemed very natural to me." In both "The Line" and "Imagining Flood," the photographs can function as documentary images which show the plain facts of a disaster. Still, the photographers are trying to make their images a little bit harder to digest easily, as simple information. With digital technologies, it's easier and easier for this kind of work to find an audience. Perhaps it will be more common for us to see these non-photojournalistic (yet still, in some way, informative) images alongside the more "traditional" images, as Mészáros calls them.

Further reading: Mészáros's own site, and this writeup on the excellent Spanish photo blog 30y3.

 

Dan Abbe is a writer working in Tokyo. He writes a blog about Japanese photography, Street Level Japan. On Twitter he's @d_abbe.

Related Tags:
Disasters, Europe, Hungary

Related Content

  • Quiet Moments in the Flood

  • That's No Tree, It's a Tower

  • Masters of Olympic Photography: Rich Clarkson

Comments

Stay Connected

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Newsletter
  • RSS
  • Tumblr
Subscribe to American Photo
Subscribe to American Photo






  • Subscribe
  • Customer Service
  • Contact Us
  • Media Kit
  • Abuse
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Newsletter Signup

Copyright © 2013 Bonnier Corporation. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited.

Most Recent

Photojournalism of the Week: May 17, 2013

Asger Carlsen's Gruesome Sculptures, Made Of Flesh And Bone

Sultans of Swagger: Neal Preston's Unseen Led Zeppelin Photos

Experts Confirm "Integrity" of 2013 World Press Photo Award Winner

Photojournalism of the Week: May 10, 2013

Documenting Quiet, Deadly Hardship in Sierra Leone

Landscapes

A Fresh Look At…Trees?

Altered Images

Books of the Year: Anup Shah's Serengeti Spy

Peter Wegner's Buildings Made of Sky

"Looking at the Land," a Digital Survey of 21st-Century Landscape Photography

On the Wall: Ori Gersht's Haunting Lives, Still and Otherwise

+ See all Landscapes

Portfolios

On the Wall: A Colorful Miasma In the Bronson Caves

Turkish Sports Cars, and the Men Who Customize Them

On the Wall: Andy Freeberg's Art For Art's Sake

Still Life, With Newt

After Catastrophe, Photographs To Help Rebuild

Better Late

+ See all Portfolios

Books

A Fresh Look At…Trees?

Books: Nigel Shafran's Teenage Precinct Shoppers

A Photobook With No End

Alec Soth, Reporting From The Valleys of Silicon, San Joaquin, and Death

Diving Into The Americans

The Fashion Photography of Viviane Sassen

+ See all Books

Street Photography

Instagram Watch: Firefighter Gabriel Angemi Portrait of Camden

William Klein + Daido Moriyama in London

On The Wall: California Strangers

A Gutted City, 40 Years Later

On the Wall: Ari Marcopoulos

XCIA: Street Illegal

+ See all Street Photography

The Internet

A Master's Work—Now Available in PDF Form

Instagram Watch: Todd Hido

Behind the Notes: Joachim Robert's Paris Skyline

Photojournalists Move To Instagram, From Syria to Sandy

At the Intersection of War and Fashion, a Compelling Controversy

Turning Photos Into Paintings, By Way of the Web

+ See all The Internet

On the Wall

Before There Was Google Street View, There Was Ed Ruscha

On the Wall: A Colorful Miasma In the Bronson Caves

Exhibits to Watch in 2013: Irving Penn's "Underfoot"

Exhibits to Watch in 2013: Bill Brandt at MoMA

The Fashion Photography of Viviane Sassen

Nine Top Photographers "Remix" Classic Photo Books That Inspired Them

+ See all On the Wall

Studio Work

Some Great Work in This Year's PDN 30

Behind the Notes: Valerio Loi's Vials of Emotion

Howard Schatz: With Child

Tim Mantoani's Portraits of Portraits

The Art of the Splash

Wild Style

+ See all Studio Work