Ciril Jazbec
Ice Stupas #0045, 2018 - 2019
archival digital print
50 x 70 cm: edition of 10 + 2 AP
60 x 85 cm: edition of 5 + 2 AP
90 x 130 cm: edition of 5 + 2 AP
130 x 190 cm: edition of 3 + 2 AP
60 x 85 cm: edition of 5 + 2 AP
90 x 130 cm: edition of 5 + 2 AP
130 x 190 cm: edition of 3 + 2 AP
Series: LEDENE STUPE / ICE STUPAS
signed and dated
ABOUT THE SERIES In the last decades the communities in the Himalayan mountains of the Ladakh region in India have started to become climate refugees forced to abandon their valleys...
ABOUT THE SERIES
In the last decades the communities in the Himalayan mountains of the Ladakh region in India have started to become climate refugees forced to abandon their valleys due to water issues. The Himalayan glaciers have been receding and water scarcity has never been so dire.A few years ago, the ingenuity of Sonam Wangchuk, a Ladakhi engineer and innovator, brought about a beacon of hope. In 2015, he prototyped ice stupas, artificial glaciers resembling Tibetan religious stupas that store winter meltwater and slowly release it for the growing season in spring, when water is most needed.At the inauguration of the project in 2015, roughly 1,000 villagers planted 5,300 saplings of willow and poplar trees using melted water from the ice stupas. The desert became cultivated land. In the years that followed numerous villages in Ladakhi region started to build ice stupas every winter. In winter in 2019 several valleys built their own ice stupas.In the eyes of the Wangchuk, the founder of the Ice Stupa International, the ice stupas should not be considered as a solution to the challenge. In his view, they stand for a final attempt of the Himalayan mountain communities to fight climate change. The real solution, in his opinion, lies in the responsibility of the nations’ governments and people living in urban areas that should adopt environmentally-friendly lifestyles to reduce emissions.Jazbec has been following Wangchuk and his team’s efforts almost from the start. As a documentary photographer, he soon understood the importance of the visual representation of this story. In 2018 and 2019 he visited the region to document the incredible scale and impact of the Ice Stupa movement.
In the last decades the communities in the Himalayan mountains of the Ladakh region in India have started to become climate refugees forced to abandon their valleys due to water issues. The Himalayan glaciers have been receding and water scarcity has never been so dire.A few years ago, the ingenuity of Sonam Wangchuk, a Ladakhi engineer and innovator, brought about a beacon of hope. In 2015, he prototyped ice stupas, artificial glaciers resembling Tibetan religious stupas that store winter meltwater and slowly release it for the growing season in spring, when water is most needed.At the inauguration of the project in 2015, roughly 1,000 villagers planted 5,300 saplings of willow and poplar trees using melted water from the ice stupas. The desert became cultivated land. In the years that followed numerous villages in Ladakhi region started to build ice stupas every winter. In winter in 2019 several valleys built their own ice stupas.In the eyes of the Wangchuk, the founder of the Ice Stupa International, the ice stupas should not be considered as a solution to the challenge. In his view, they stand for a final attempt of the Himalayan mountain communities to fight climate change. The real solution, in his opinion, lies in the responsibility of the nations’ governments and people living in urban areas that should adopt environmentally-friendly lifestyles to reduce emissions.Jazbec has been following Wangchuk and his team’s efforts almost from the start. As a documentary photographer, he soon understood the importance of the visual representation of this story. In 2018 and 2019 he visited the region to document the incredible scale and impact of the Ice Stupa movement.

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