When the Last Tree Falls, Will Anybody Hear
2006 30.5 x 40.25" ~ 77.5 x 102.5 cm Acrylic Paint on CanvasFrom the highest point on Easter Island, one of it’s inhabitants could have stood and surveyed the entire known world. 64 square miles, a Pacific Island literally in the middle of nowhere, heavily treed when it was first discovered by it’s Polynesian settlers. Over many hundreds of years however, the population increased, and the trees thinned. The trees were used for food, shelter, firewood, clothing, canoes, rope, and for the Moai, the giant stone heads, whom the islanders worshiped.
The Polynesians brought three different animals with them when they came to their island. They brought chickens, which played a critical role in the islanders diet. They brought domestic rats, which in hindsight was not good idea, because the rats ate the seeds which fell from the trees, and when a sapling did manage to take root, they ate all the leaves and killed it, thus preventing reforestation. They also brought dogs. The dog looks nervous, and he has a reason to be. His descendants do not long survive the felling of the last tree. As the trees disappear, nutrients are washed out of the poor soil, and the crops fail. When the last of the good wood was used up the islanders lost the ability to leave their Island, or to fish off shore. The overpopulated Island descended into starvation and warfare. Let us hope Easter Island is not our canary in the mine.
This painting has paritcipated in International Exhibits based in;
Icosahedron Gallery New York, NYUnited States November, 2008New York, NY, United States, 2006
Plano, Texas, United States, 2006
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