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Klaus Thymann

Klaus Thymann (born 1974)[1] is a Danish explorer, scientist, fellow at The Explorers Club, fellow at the Royal Geographical Society, photographer, filmmaker and creator.[2][3] He has developed an original viewpoint utilising a cross-disciplinary skillset that combines journalism, image making, mapping, documentary and exploration with a focus on contemporary issues and the climate emergency.[4] Thymann has been featured by BBC, National Geographic, The Guardian, New Scientist and many other distinguished media outlets.[5] He was awarded with the Sony World Photography Award in 2013 and was the youngest winner of the Scandinavian Kodak Gold Award in 1996.[6][3] He is on the Expert Roster at UNESCO – UN Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development.[1]

Klaus Thymann
Born1974
NationalityDanish
EducationBachelor of Science
Alma materThe Open University
Occupations
  • Explorer
  • Scientist
  • Creator
Years active1997 - present
OrganizationProject Pressure
AwardsSony World Photography Awards
Danish Music Awards
Websitewww.klausthymann.com

Early life, education edit

Thymann was born in 1974 in Copenhagen, Denmark.[1] In 1988, at the age of fourteen, he began working as a photographer, photographing tourists for the Canal Tours. For the next few years, he also worked as a photographer and writer for several Danish publications. He attended Marie Kruses Skole in Farum, Denmark where he graduated in 1993. In 1996, Thymann was the recipient of the Scandinavian Kodak Gold Award. He received a Bachelor of Science degree in Environmental studies from The Open University (UK) in 2015.[7]

Early Career edit

In Thymann’s early career he photographed musicians and made music videos, he worked with Kashimir and photographed David Bowie, Depeche Mode, Coldplay, Green Day, David Bowie, Linkin Park, The Kills, Prodigy, The Cardigans, Suede, Elvis Costello and Robyn amongst many more.

In collaboration with the Danish alternative rock band Kashmir, he created the music video of the song "Mom in Love & Daddy in Space”.[8] He was awarded with the 2000 Danish Music Awards in the Danish Music Video of the Year category for the video [citation needed] and the video was nominated for a MTV award.

Career edit

Thymann has a degree in environmental science. Through leading teams and working collaboratively, Thymann has partnered with institutions including NASA, the United Nations, World Glacier Monitoring Service and Danish Technical University – conceiving new methodologies and creating inventions along the way. In 2020, Thymann discovered an abundance of corals in Jammer Bay, Denmark —a find that led him to spearhead a ground-breaking habitat mapping project with the Danish Technical University, in partnership with the local fishing community, funded by a €500,000 grant he secured from the Velux Foundation.[9] He has conducted the only scuba dive of the world's clearest lake in New Zealand[10] and made several discoveries as he conducts exploration with a scientific purpose.

As a journalist, Thymann has conducted original reporting for BBC,[11] Bloomberg, CNN, the New York Times,[11] The Guardian,[12] Vice and many others[13] while working from conflict zones,[14] jungles, remote mountains, glaciers,[15] and the oceans.[11] Thymann began working in journalism as a teenager. In 1997 he co-founded a Danish magazine, Virus, a biannual publication with in-depth features. The magazine was first to publish a feature on ECHELON, a surveillance program operated by the United States.[16] The feature opened up the way for an investigation by a committee of the European Parliament during 2000 and 2001 with a report published in 2001.[17] From 2000, he started working internationally and undertook diverse assignments include reporting and photographing for the New York Times in Gaza and Tonga, conducting expeditions in Uganda and Congo DRC for the BBC, and decades of environmental reporting for The Guardian.[18][19][20]

As an explorer, he has led more than 50 purpose-driven expeditions to extreme environments across six continents and into four of the planet’s oceans. He is a fellow at The Explorers Club of New York, a designation he earned through his significant discoveries, including finding corals in Danish waters,[18] prehistoric human bones deep inside a submerged Mexican cave system,[21] and an unexplored manatee habitat in the Yucatán.[22] He has revealed equatorial glaciers by trekking a new route into Congo DRC and reported unnamed glaciers in Nepal.[23] He has conducted the only scuba dive of the world's clearest lake in New Zealand,[10] documented tourism in Iraq, parkour in Gaza, the relocation of the Arctic town Kiruna In Sweden[24] and explored the glaciers of Uganda and Congo via new trekking routes.[10][25][26] He is comfortable confronting the limits of the human body, both as a climber summiting oxygen-deprived peaks above 6300m[27] and as a technical diver capable of navigating in deep waters, below ice, and in narrow flooded caves. His scientific and exploration work has been featured by New Scientist,[18][28][29] National Geographic, Wired,[30] Red Bull[13] and more.

As a filmmaker, Thymann has reached audiences of tens of millions through commissions from premium media outlets. For CNN, he travelled deep into Brazil’s Amazon,[31] past the frontier of deforestation, to show the conflict between an indigenous community and land grabbing ranchers. In the Bikini Atolls for CNN,[32]  he dived atomic wrecks and walked on the still-toxic island to tell the story of America’s nuclear legacy. He has revealed the impact of mining in the Arctic through the story of long-time residents and Sami reindeer herders.[24] For The Guardian he entered a never explored glacier cave.[29] Thymann’s work in Mexico has taken him cave diving beneath illegal construction sites in the jungle and up close with cartels haunting the streets of Tulum for Vice[33] and New Scientist featuring his manatee habitat discovery.[22]

As an artist, his artworks have been exhibited at Designmuseum Denmark, Horniman Museum London, Institute of Contemporary Art London, Natural History Museum Vienna, Museum of Climate Change Hong Kong and Moderna Museet Stockholm.[34]

Thymann has guest lectured at Oxford University, University of St Andrews, The Photographers' Gallery, Central St. Martin’s College of Art and Design, Hong Kong University, Rome University, Cancun University, University of the Arts London, Natural History Museum Vienna. He is a Hasselblad Ambassador and has served on the board of organizations such The Design and Artists Copyright Society, UNICEF, Extinction Rebellion and Red Cross.[35] His charitable work has been supported by the Queen of Denmark, Arts Council England, Danish Arts Foundation and Swiss Environmental Ministry.[36]

In 2008, he establish the charity Project Pressure an ecological and climate-focused charity with over 15 years of experience in instigating, conceptualizing, and leading ambitious change-driven projects with an emphasis on field-building.[37] Through Project Pressure he collaborates with world-renowned artists to create and exhibit provocative work that inspires climate action. Materials from these projects have been used by activists and policymakers to support their ongoing work.[38][39]

Projects and expeditions edit

Hybrids edit

In 2007, Thymann completed a four year documentation and published Hybrids, an art project featuring documentary photography with a global perspective exploring peculiar hybrid cultures around the planet, such as Snow Polo in St. Moritz, Gay Rodeo in Los Angeles, Underwater Striptease in Chile, Underground Gardening in Tokyo and more.[40] Hybrids is a significant body of Thymann's art work between 2004 and 2008 and was exhibited in London, New York and Copenhagen.[41]

Project Pressure edit

In 2008, Thymann founded Project Pressure, a global environmental charity dedicated to highlight the impact of climate change, inspiring action and participation.[19] The charity is collaborating with artists creating and exhibiting work to engage emotions in order to incite positive behavioural change.

Rwenzori Mountains edit

In 2012, Thymann with his journalist colleague Ian Daly, and a team of nine local Ugandans spent 18 days detailing Rwenzori Mountains' glaciers from both sides of the range that lies on the equator.[26] He has uncovered glaciers by trekking a new route into Congo and a applying historic maps onto a GPS device and Thymann's team traversed Congolese side of the range, where practically no one has been for decades because of insurgency and war.[23] Thymann documented that glaciers have retreated massively on the east side of the mountains and the meltdown is super-intense with less than one kilometer square of ice remaining. Some geographers estimate that there will be no ice left within a decade.[42]

Worlds clearest lake edit

Thymann is the only person to have conducted a scuba dive in the world's clearest lake, Blue Lake in New Zealand.[43] In February 2013, he explored the underwater cave system of the Yucatán peninsula in order to take photographs, diving 1 km underwater to where salt and freshwater meet. The expedition was supported by New Zealand Department of Conservation and New Zealand Tourism and featured in The Guardian.[28] In 2015, for the images taken during this expedition, Thymann received Honorable Mention at the International Photography Awards.[44]

Kiruna edit

Starting in 2013, Thymann has documented the Arctic town of Kiruna in the Lapland region of Sweden creating and ongoing documentation of move of the town because of the unstable ground as a fissure caused by excessive iron ore. Thymann's expedition to Kiruna received coverage from Vice, Bloomberg and CNN.[24]

Glaciers documentation (Iran, Greenland and Ecuador) edit

Since 2008, Thymann has led expedition to detail the glaciers in remote regions to show that climate change is a global issue. He has led expeditions to Iceland, Norway, Switzerland, Sweden, United States, Argentina, Mexico, Chile, Spain, Uganda, Greenland, Iran, New Zealand, Nepal, Ecuador, Bolivia and Colombia.[2][45][46] The expeditions were part of a mission by the charity Project Pressure to document the world’s vanishing and receding glaciers using art as inspiration for action.[20]

Underwater cave exploration edit

Since 2016, Thymann is exploring underwater rivers on the Yucatán in Mexico. He wrote and directed a long-format documentary film of this form of environmental exploration, Flows, with music by Thom Yorke.[47] By mapping underwater caves, areas that have been untouched by modern civilisation, he hopes to raise awareness of the natural and human heritage of this unique ecosystem that will hopefully result in greater protection.[21] In 2018, The Guardian featured his work and in 2020, he created a short documentary for Red Bull.[48][29] In 2022, Thymann discovered a new manatee habitat within the cenotes and documented the discovery with a 12-minute film that is available on the interactive streaming platform WaterBear.[49] The discovery got picked up by the New Scientist in 2024, who featured in a 10-minute short film.[22]

Tonga Whales edit

In an expedition to the coast of Vava'u, Tonga in 2017, Thymann photographed the Tonga Whales for The New York Times Magazine. The series documents the pilot and humpback whales congregating in Tonga to raise their new-born calves.[11]

Shroud edit

In an attempt to preserve an ice-grotto tourist attraction at the Rhône Glacier, local Swiss entrepreneurs wrapped a significant section of the ice-body in a thermal blanket.[50] In early 2018, in their collaborative work, Simon Norfolk and Thymann address financial issues as driving forces behind human adaptation to the changing climate. The title Shroud refers to the melting glacier under its death cloak. In addition, a thermal image time-lapse film was created, showing how glaciers compare to the surrounding landscape by only reacting to long-term temperature changes, as opposed to weather fluctuations.[51] The project was featured in New Scientist and the Los Angeles Times and is part of Project Pressure’s travelling exhibition MELTDOWN.[52][53]

Nuclear wrecks in the Bikini Atolls edit

In 2019, Thymann dived the nuclear wrecks in the Bikini Atoll at 65 meters depth. In a mini documentary for CNN, Thymann travelled to the Marshall Islands to learn about the legacy of United States nuclear testing.[54]

Voices For The Future edit

In 2019, Thymann-led global charity Project Pressure was responsible for the Voices For The Future, an art piece projected and transmitted on the UN building, featuring Swedish student activist Greta Thunberg in New York City in the lead-up to the 2019 UN Climate Action Summit.[39] Thymann authored the messages of six young activists, including an authorized edit of Thunberg's words. The visualization was done by New Zealand-based artist Joseph Michael. Soundtracked by musician and artist Brian Eno, their commentary on the climate crisis (and the urgent actions that need to be taken to minimize its consequences).[38]

Corals in Denmark edit

In 2020, Thymann led seafloor mapping project at Jammerbugt coast in Jutland, Denmark where he discovered an abundance of dead man’s fingers, the only soft coral found in Danish waters. Earlier, it was believed that the majority of the Jammerbugten’s seafloor was sandy with a low density of species, until Thymann found evidence of much greater biodiversity in a range seafloor habitats. This discovery by Thymann received wide coverage including that from The Guardian in July 2020[18] and a 7-minute short film featured by the New Scientist in late 2023.[9]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "Biography". klausthymann.com. Retrieved 18 December 2023.
  2. ^ a b Main, Douglas (26 March 2015). "Photographing the World's Vanishing Glaciers". Newsweek. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  3. ^ a b Milmoe, Joanne. "Klaus Thymann wins Sony World Photography Award". www.dacs.org.uk. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  4. ^ "Klaus Thymann, Denmark". www.worldphoto.org. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  5. ^ "Hasselblad ambassador Klaus Thymann Denmark". Hasselblad. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  6. ^ "Simon Norfolk & Klaus Thymann". Granta. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  7. ^ Seibt, Esther (29 January 2021). "Klaus Thymann: An Interview with the Photographer, Filmmaker and Explorer". nobleandstyle.com. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  8. ^ Kashmir - Mom In Love, Daddy In Space, retrieved 9 March 2024
  9. ^ a b Stock, David. "Uncharted waters: The scientists saving Denmark's hidden coral". New Scientist. Retrieved 5 March 2024.
  10. ^ a b c Vankin, Jonathan (7 November 2017). "What's So Special About This Lake That Humans Are Not Allowed To Swim In It? Something Amazing". www.inquisitr.com. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  11. ^ a b c d Lowe, Jaime; Thymann, Klaus (24 February 2017). "Floating With Leviathans in the South Pacific". www.nytimes.com. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  12. ^ McVeigh, Karen (10 August 2022). "'We borrow our lands from our children': Sami say they are paying for Sweden going green". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 5 March 2024.
  13. ^ a b "Hidden depths". Red Bull. 13 April 2021. Retrieved 5 March 2024.
  14. ^ Thymann, Klaus (11 May 2015). "Iran's Former American Embassy Is Now a Museum of Anti-American Art". Vice. Retrieved 5 March 2024.
  15. ^ "Vanishing Glaciers by Project Pressure - in pictures". the Guardian. 28 March 2018. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 5 March 2024.
  16. ^ Kotsoni, Elektra (27 February 2014). "La città svedese che sta sprofondando". Vice. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  17. ^ Schmid, Gerhard (11 July 2001). "On the existence of a global system for the interception of private and commercial communications (ECHELON interception system), (2001/2098(INI))". European Parliament: Temporary Committee on the ECHELON Interception System. from the original on 26 December 2013. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  18. ^ a b c d "Coral discovered in uncharted Danish waters – in pictures". The Guardian. 17 July 2020. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  19. ^ a b "Meltdown: the climate crisis – in pictures". The Guardian. 19 June 2019. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  20. ^ a b "Greenland's glaciers through an artist's eyes - in pictures". The Guardian. 25 February 2016. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  21. ^ a b Daly, Ian. "Exploring the Secret Caves Beneath Mexico's Biggest Tourist Destination". www.mensjournal.com. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  22. ^ a b c Stock, David. "Manatees discovered in pristine but threatened underwater cave habitat". New Scientist. Retrieved 5 March 2024.
  23. ^ a b Vidal, John (5 June 2012). "Race to Map Africa's Forgotten Glaciers Before They Melt Away". www.motherjones.com. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  24. ^ a b c Kotsoni, Elektra (24 February 2014). "The Swedish Town Being Swallowed by the Earth". Vice. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  25. ^ Farrell, Stephen (2 December 2011). "The Graveyard Shift". The New York Times. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  26. ^ a b "The race to map Africa's forgotten glaciers – in pictures". The Guardian. 2 June 2012. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  27. ^ McLeod, Ruth; Thymann, Klaus (13 April 2021). "Hidden depths". www.redbull.com. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  28. ^ a b "The clearest lake in the world – in pictures". The Guardian. 12 June 2013. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  29. ^ a b c Hilaire, Eric (17 May 2018). "'Swimming into the unknown:' Mexico's unmapped underwater caves - in pictures". The Guardian. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  30. ^ Locke, Charley. "This Guy Went to Earth's Most Remote Places So You Don't Have To". Wired. ISSN 1059-1028. Retrieved 6 March 2024.
  31. ^ The fight for Brazil’s rainforest, retrieved 9 March 2024
  32. ^ Atomic bombs destroyed this paradise, retrieved 9 March 2024
  33. ^ Drugs Are Poisoning the Water in This Mexican Vacation Destination, retrieved 9 March 2024
  34. ^ "Klaus Thymann on display at The Natural History Museum in Vienna". instituteartist.com. 1 May 2019. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  35. ^ "Award-winning Danish photographer and project pressure founder Klaus Thymann joins prestigious lineup of Hasselblad ambassadors". Hasselblad. 6 May 2020. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  36. ^ "Klaus Thymann representing Denmark in the photo exhibition Forever Changes at COP26 in Glasgow". www.project-pressure.org. 8 October 2021. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  37. ^ "Intro". Project Pressure - Art, Science, Climate Impact. Retrieved 6 March 2024.
  38. ^ a b "Voices for the Future: climate activism lights up the UN – in pictures". The Guardian. 20 September 2019. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  39. ^ a b Piven, Ben (23 September 2019). "Voices for the Future urges climate action at UN". www.aljazeera.com. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  40. ^ "Klaus Thymann 'Hybrids'". www.jaguarshoes.com. 26 October 2007. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  41. ^ Hudson, Will (19 December 2007). "Hybrids Project / Klaus Thymann". www.itsnicethat.com. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  42. ^ Daly, Ian (5 May 2012). "Last chance to see: a photographic tour of Earth's doomed ice". Wired. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  43. ^ Main, Douglas (20 June 2013). "Photos: The Clearest Lake on Earth". www.livescience.com. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  44. ^ "Clearest Lake". www.photoawards.com. 1 February 2015. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  45. ^ "Glaciers of Iran – in pictures". The Guardian. 16 December 2014. Retrieved 27 September 2022.
  46. ^ Testere, Alex (23 March 2017). "What It's Like to Eat Breakfast Above the Clouds". www.saveur.com. Retrieved 27 September 2022.
  47. ^ Locke, Charley (16 August 2016). "This Guy Went to Earth's Most Remote Places So You Don't Have To". www.wired.com. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  48. ^ "Underwater Explorer". www.redbull.com. 2020. Retrieved 27 September 2022.
  49. ^ "Flows For Manatees". www.waterbear.com. Retrieved 10 March 2023.
  50. ^ Bachmann, Helena (13 March 2018). "The Swiss found a way to save this glacier from melting: Wrap it in a giant blanket". www.usatoday.com. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  51. ^ Suzanne, McGonagle (18 May 2021). "Climate change, migration and power of protest among themes of Belfast Photo Festival". www.irishnews.com. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  52. ^ Ings, Simon (20 September 2018). "Photography: heating up the climate campaign". www.newscientist.com. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  53. ^ Ollman, Leah (29 April 2019). "Review: Simon Norfolk's traumatic photos capture a Swiss glacier on life support". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  54. ^ "Klaus Thymann films and photographs Bikini Atoll". www.instituteartist.com. 28 May 2019. Retrieved 29 September 2022.

External links edit

  • Official website

klaus, thymann, born, 1974, danish, explorer, scientist, fellow, explorers, club, fellow, royal, geographical, society, photographer, filmmaker, creator, developed, original, viewpoint, utilising, cross, disciplinary, skillset, that, combines, journalism, imag. Klaus Thymann born 1974 1 is a Danish explorer scientist fellow at The Explorers Club fellow at the Royal Geographical Society photographer filmmaker and creator 2 3 He has developed an original viewpoint utilising a cross disciplinary skillset that combines journalism image making mapping documentary and exploration with a focus on contemporary issues and the climate emergency 4 Thymann has been featured by BBC National Geographic The Guardian New Scientist and many other distinguished media outlets 5 He was awarded with the Sony World Photography Award in 2013 and was the youngest winner of the Scandinavian Kodak Gold Award in 1996 6 3 He is on the Expert Roster at UNESCO UN Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development 1 Klaus ThymannBorn1974Copenhagen DenmarkNationalityDanishEducationBachelor of ScienceAlma materThe Open UniversityOccupationsExplorer Scientist CreatorYears active1997 presentOrganizationProject PressureAwardsSony World Photography Awards Danish Music AwardsWebsitewww wbr klausthymann wbr com Contents 1 Early life education 2 Early Career 3 Career 4 Projects and expeditions 4 1 Hybrids 4 2 Project Pressure 4 3 Rwenzori Mountains 4 4 Worlds clearest lake 4 5 Kiruna 4 6 Glaciers documentation Iran Greenland and Ecuador 4 7 Underwater cave exploration 4 8 Tonga Whales 4 9 Shroud 4 10 Nuclear wrecks in the Bikini Atolls 4 11 Voices For The Future 4 12 Corals in Denmark 5 References 6 External linksEarly life education editThymann was born in 1974 in Copenhagen Denmark 1 In 1988 at the age of fourteen he began working as a photographer photographing tourists for the Canal Tours For the next few years he also worked as a photographer and writer for several Danish publications He attended Marie Kruses Skole in Farum Denmark where he graduated in 1993 In 1996 Thymann was the recipient of the Scandinavian Kodak Gold Award He received a Bachelor of Science degree in Environmental studies from The Open University UK in 2015 7 Early Career editIn Thymann s early career he photographed musicians and made music videos he worked with Kashimir and photographed David Bowie Depeche Mode Coldplay Green Day David Bowie Linkin Park The Kills Prodigy The Cardigans Suede Elvis Costello and Robyn amongst many more In collaboration with the Danish alternative rock band Kashmir he created the music video of the song Mom in Love amp Daddy in Space 8 He was awarded with the 2000 Danish Music Awards in the Danish Music Video of the Year category for the video citation needed and the video was nominated for a MTV award Career editThymann has a degree in environmental science Through leading teams and working collaboratively Thymann has partnered with institutions including NASA the United Nations World Glacier Monitoring Service and Danish Technical University conceiving new methodologies and creating inventions along the way In 2020 Thymann discovered an abundance of corals in Jammer Bay Denmark a find that led him to spearhead a ground breaking habitat mapping project with the Danish Technical University in partnership with the local fishing community funded by a 500 000 grant he secured from the Velux Foundation 9 He has conducted the only scuba dive of the world s clearest lake in New Zealand 10 and made several discoveries as he conducts exploration with a scientific purpose As a journalist Thymann has conducted original reporting for BBC 11 Bloomberg CNN the New York Times 11 The Guardian 12 Vice and many others 13 while working from conflict zones 14 jungles remote mountains glaciers 15 and the oceans 11 Thymann began working in journalism as a teenager In 1997 he co founded a Danish magazine Virus a biannual publication with in depth features The magazine was first to publish a feature on ECHELON a surveillance program operated by the United States 16 The feature opened up the way for an investigation by a committee of the European Parliament during 2000 and 2001 with a report published in 2001 17 From 2000 he started working internationally and undertook diverse assignments include reporting and photographing for the New York Times in Gaza and Tonga conducting expeditions in Uganda and Congo DRC for the BBC and decades of environmental reporting for The Guardian 18 19 20 As an explorer he has led more than 50 purpose driven expeditions to extreme environments across six continents and into four of the planet s oceans He is a fellow at The Explorers Club of New York a designation he earned through his significant discoveries including finding corals in Danish waters 18 prehistoric human bones deep inside a submerged Mexican cave system 21 and an unexplored manatee habitat in the Yucatan 22 He has revealed equatorial glaciers by trekking a new route into Congo DRC and reported unnamed glaciers in Nepal 23 He has conducted the only scuba dive of the world s clearest lake in New Zealand 10 documented tourism in Iraq parkour in Gaza the relocation of the Arctic town Kiruna In Sweden 24 and explored the glaciers of Uganda and Congo via new trekking routes 10 25 26 He is comfortable confronting the limits of the human body both as a climber summiting oxygen deprived peaks above 6300m 27 and as a technical diver capable of navigating in deep waters below ice and in narrow flooded caves His scientific and exploration work has been featured by New Scientist 18 28 29 National Geographic Wired 30 Red Bull 13 and more As a filmmaker Thymann has reached audiences of tens of millions through commissions from premium media outlets For CNN he travelled deep into Brazil s Amazon 31 past the frontier of deforestation to show the conflict between an indigenous community and land grabbing ranchers In the Bikini Atolls for CNN 32 he dived atomic wrecks and walked on the still toxic island to tell the story of America s nuclear legacy He has revealed the impact of mining in the Arctic through the story of long time residents and Sami reindeer herders 24 For The Guardian he entered a never explored glacier cave 29 Thymann s work in Mexico has taken him cave diving beneath illegal construction sites in the jungle and up close with cartels haunting the streets of Tulum for Vice 33 and New Scientist featuring his manatee habitat discovery 22 As an artist his artworks have been exhibited at Designmuseum Denmark Horniman Museum London Institute of Contemporary Art London Natural History Museum Vienna Museum of Climate Change Hong Kong and Moderna Museet Stockholm 34 Thymann has guest lectured at Oxford University University of St Andrews The Photographers Gallery Central St Martin s College of Art and Design Hong Kong University Rome University Cancun University University of the Arts London Natural History Museum Vienna He is a Hasselblad Ambassador and has served on the board of organizations such The Design and Artists Copyright Society UNICEF Extinction Rebellion and Red Cross 35 His charitable work has been supported by the Queen of Denmark Arts Council England Danish Arts Foundation and Swiss Environmental Ministry 36 In 2008 he establish the charity Project Pressure an ecological and climate focused charity with over 15 years of experience in instigating conceptualizing and leading ambitious change driven projects with an emphasis on field building 37 Through Project Pressure he collaborates with world renowned artists to create and exhibit provocative work that inspires climate action Materials from these projects have been used by activists and policymakers to support their ongoing work 38 39 Projects and expeditions editHybrids edit In 2007 Thymann completed a four year documentation and published Hybrids an art project featuring documentary photography with a global perspective exploring peculiar hybrid cultures around the planet such as Snow Polo in St Moritz Gay Rodeo in Los Angeles Underwater Striptease in Chile Underground Gardening in Tokyo and more 40 Hybrids is a significant body of Thymann s art work between 2004 and 2008 and was exhibited in London New York and Copenhagen 41 Project Pressure edit In 2008 Thymann founded Project Pressure a global environmental charity dedicated to highlight the impact of climate change inspiring action and participation 19 The charity is collaborating with artists creating and exhibiting work to engage emotions in order to incite positive behavioural change Rwenzori Mountains edit In 2012 Thymann with his journalist colleague Ian Daly and a team of nine local Ugandans spent 18 days detailing Rwenzori Mountains glaciers from both sides of the range that lies on the equator 26 He has uncovered glaciers by trekking a new route into Congo and a applying historic maps onto a GPS device and Thymann s team traversed Congolese side of the range where practically no one has been for decades because of insurgency and war 23 Thymann documented that glaciers have retreated massively on the east side of the mountains and the meltdown is super intense with less than one kilometer square of ice remaining Some geographers estimate that there will be no ice left within a decade 42 Worlds clearest lake edit Thymann is the only person to have conducted a scuba dive in the world s clearest lake Blue Lake in New Zealand 43 In February 2013 he explored the underwater cave system of the Yucatan peninsula in order to take photographs diving 1 km underwater to where salt and freshwater meet The expedition was supported by New Zealand Department of Conservation and New Zealand Tourism and featured in The Guardian 28 In 2015 for the images taken during this expedition Thymann received Honorable Mention at the International Photography Awards 44 Kiruna edit Starting in 2013 Thymann has documented the Arctic town of Kiruna in the Lapland region of Sweden creating and ongoing documentation of move of the town because of the unstable ground as a fissure caused by excessive iron ore Thymann s expedition to Kiruna received coverage from Vice Bloomberg and CNN 24 Glaciers documentation Iran Greenland and Ecuador edit Since 2008 Thymann has led expedition to detail the glaciers in remote regions to show that climate change is a global issue He has led expeditions to Iceland Norway Switzerland Sweden United States Argentina Mexico Chile Spain Uganda Greenland Iran New Zealand Nepal Ecuador Bolivia and Colombia 2 45 46 The expeditions were part of a mission by the charity Project Pressure to document the world s vanishing and receding glaciers using art as inspiration for action 20 Underwater cave exploration edit Since 2016 Thymann is exploring underwater rivers on the Yucatan in Mexico He wrote and directed a long format documentary film of this form of environmental exploration Flows with music by Thom Yorke 47 By mapping underwater caves areas that have been untouched by modern civilisation he hopes to raise awareness of the natural and human heritage of this unique ecosystem that will hopefully result in greater protection 21 In 2018 The Guardian featured his work and in 2020 he created a short documentary for Red Bull 48 29 In 2022 Thymann discovered a new manatee habitat within the cenotes and documented the discovery with a 12 minute film that is available on the interactive streaming platform WaterBear 49 The discovery got picked up by the New Scientist in 2024 who featured in a 10 minute short film 22 Tonga Whales edit In an expedition to the coast of Vava u Tonga in 2017 Thymann photographed the Tonga Whales for The New York Times Magazine The series documents the pilot and humpback whales congregating in Tonga to raise their new born calves 11 Shroud edit In an attempt to preserve an ice grotto tourist attraction at the Rhone Glacier local Swiss entrepreneurs wrapped a significant section of the ice body in a thermal blanket 50 In early 2018 in their collaborative work Simon Norfolk and Thymann address financial issues as driving forces behind human adaptation to the changing climate The title Shroud refers to the melting glacier under its death cloak In addition a thermal image time lapse film was created showing how glaciers compare to the surrounding landscape by only reacting to long term temperature changes as opposed to weather fluctuations 51 The project was featured in New Scientist and the Los Angeles Times and is part of Project Pressure s travelling exhibition MELTDOWN 52 53 Nuclear wrecks in the Bikini Atolls edit In 2019 Thymann dived the nuclear wrecks in the Bikini Atoll at 65 meters depth In a mini documentary for CNN Thymann travelled to the Marshall Islands to learn about the legacy of United States nuclear testing 54 Voices For The Future edit In 2019 Thymann led global charity Project Pressure was responsible for the Voices For The Future an art piece projected and transmitted on the UN building featuring Swedish student activist Greta Thunberg in New York City in the lead up to the 2019 UN Climate Action Summit 39 Thymann authored the messages of six young activists including an authorized edit of Thunberg s words The visualization was done by New Zealand based artist Joseph Michael Soundtracked by musician and artist Brian Eno their commentary on the climate crisis and the urgent actions that need to be taken to minimize its consequences 38 Corals in Denmark edit In 2020 Thymann led seafloor mapping project at Jammerbugt coast in Jutland Denmark where he discovered an abundance of dead man s fingers the only soft coral found in Danish waters Earlier it was believed that the majority of the Jammerbugten s seafloor was sandy with a low density of species until Thymann found evidence of much greater biodiversity in a range seafloor habitats This discovery by Thymann received wide coverage including that from The Guardian in July 2020 18 and a 7 minute short film featured by the New Scientist in late 2023 9 References edit a b c Biography klausthymann com Retrieved 18 December 2023 a b Main Douglas 26 March 2015 Photographing the World s Vanishing Glaciers Newsweek Retrieved 29 September 2022 a b Milmoe Joanne Klaus Thymann wins Sony World Photography Award www dacs org uk Retrieved 29 September 2022 Klaus Thymann Denmark www worldphoto org Retrieved 29 September 2022 Hasselblad ambassador Klaus Thymann Denmark Hasselblad Retrieved 29 September 2022 Simon Norfolk amp Klaus Thymann Granta Retrieved 29 September 2022 Seibt Esther 29 January 2021 Klaus Thymann An Interview with the Photographer Filmmaker and Explorer nobleandstyle com Retrieved 29 September 2022 Kashmir Mom In Love Daddy In Space retrieved 9 March 2024 a b Stock David Uncharted waters The scientists saving Denmark s hidden coral New Scientist Retrieved 5 March 2024 a b c Vankin Jonathan 7 November 2017 What s So Special About This Lake That Humans Are Not Allowed To Swim In It Something Amazing www inquisitr com Retrieved 29 September 2022 a b c d Lowe Jaime Thymann Klaus 24 February 2017 Floating With Leviathans in the South Pacific www nytimes com Retrieved 29 September 2022 McVeigh Karen 10 August 2022 We borrow our lands from our children Sami say they are paying for Sweden going green The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 5 March 2024 a b Hidden depths Red Bull 13 April 2021 Retrieved 5 March 2024 Thymann Klaus 11 May 2015 Iran s Former American Embassy Is Now a Museum of Anti American Art Vice Retrieved 5 March 2024 Vanishing Glaciers by Project Pressure in pictures the Guardian 28 March 2018 ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 5 March 2024 Kotsoni Elektra 27 February 2014 La citta svedese che sta sprofondando Vice Retrieved 29 September 2022 Schmid Gerhard 11 July 2001 On the existence of a global system for the interception of private and commercial communications ECHELON interception system 2001 2098 INI European Parliament Temporary Committee on the ECHELON Interception System Archived from the original on 26 December 2013 Retrieved 29 September 2022 a b c d Coral discovered in uncharted Danish waters in pictures The Guardian 17 July 2020 Retrieved 29 September 2022 a b Meltdown the climate crisis in pictures The Guardian 19 June 2019 Retrieved 29 September 2022 a b Greenland s glaciers through an artist s eyes in pictures The Guardian 25 February 2016 Retrieved 29 September 2022 a b Daly Ian Exploring the Secret Caves Beneath Mexico s Biggest Tourist Destination www mensjournal com Retrieved 29 September 2022 a b c Stock David Manatees discovered in pristine but threatened underwater cave habitat New Scientist Retrieved 5 March 2024 a b Vidal John 5 June 2012 Race to Map Africa s Forgotten Glaciers Before They Melt Away www motherjones com Retrieved 29 September 2022 a b c Kotsoni Elektra 24 February 2014 The Swedish Town Being Swallowed by the Earth Vice Retrieved 29 September 2022 Farrell Stephen 2 December 2011 The Graveyard Shift The New York Times Retrieved 29 September 2022 a b The race to map Africa s forgotten glaciers in pictures The Guardian 2 June 2012 Retrieved 29 September 2022 McLeod Ruth Thymann Klaus 13 April 2021 Hidden depths www redbull com Retrieved 29 September 2022 a b The clearest lake in the world in pictures The Guardian 12 June 2013 Retrieved 29 September 2022 a b c Hilaire Eric 17 May 2018 Swimming into the unknown Mexico s unmapped underwater caves in pictures The Guardian Retrieved 29 September 2022 Locke Charley This Guy Went to Earth s Most Remote Places So You Don t Have To Wired ISSN 1059 1028 Retrieved 6 March 2024 The fight for Brazil s rainforest retrieved 9 March 2024 Atomic bombs destroyed this paradise retrieved 9 March 2024 Drugs Are Poisoning the Water in This Mexican Vacation Destination retrieved 9 March 2024 Klaus Thymann on display at The Natural History Museum in Vienna instituteartist com 1 May 2019 Retrieved 29 September 2022 Award winning Danish photographer and project pressure founder Klaus Thymann joins prestigious lineup of Hasselblad ambassadors Hasselblad 6 May 2020 Retrieved 29 September 2022 Klaus Thymann representing Denmark in the photo exhibition Forever Changes at COP26 in Glasgow www project pressure org 8 October 2021 Retrieved 29 September 2022 Intro Project Pressure Art Science Climate Impact Retrieved 6 March 2024 a b Voices for the Future climate activism lights up the UN in pictures The Guardian 20 September 2019 Retrieved 29 September 2022 a b Piven Ben 23 September 2019 Voices for the Future urges climate action at UN www aljazeera com Retrieved 29 September 2022 Klaus Thymann Hybrids www jaguarshoes com 26 October 2007 Retrieved 29 September 2022 Hudson Will 19 December 2007 Hybrids Project Klaus Thymann www itsnicethat com Retrieved 29 September 2022 Daly Ian 5 May 2012 Last chance to see a photographic tour of Earth s doomed ice Wired Retrieved 29 September 2022 Main Douglas 20 June 2013 Photos The Clearest Lake on Earth www livescience com Retrieved 29 September 2022 Clearest Lake www photoawards com 1 February 2015 Retrieved 29 September 2022 Glaciers of Iran in pictures The Guardian 16 December 2014 Retrieved 27 September 2022 Testere Alex 23 March 2017 What It s Like to Eat Breakfast Above the Clouds www saveur com Retrieved 27 September 2022 Locke Charley 16 August 2016 This Guy Went to Earth s Most Remote Places So You Don t Have To www wired com Retrieved 29 September 2022 Underwater Explorer www redbull com 2020 Retrieved 27 September 2022 Flows For Manatees www waterbear com Retrieved 10 March 2023 Bachmann Helena 13 March 2018 The Swiss found a way to save this glacier from melting Wrap it in a giant blanket www usatoday com Retrieved 29 September 2022 Suzanne McGonagle 18 May 2021 Climate change migration and power of protest among themes of Belfast Photo Festival www irishnews com Retrieved 29 September 2022 Ings Simon 20 September 2018 Photography heating up the climate campaign www newscientist com Retrieved 29 September 2022 Ollman Leah 29 April 2019 Review Simon Norfolk s traumatic photos capture a Swiss glacier on life support Los Angeles Times Retrieved 29 September 2022 Klaus Thymann films and photographs Bikini Atoll www instituteartist com 28 May 2019 Retrieved 29 September 2022 External links editOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Klaus Thymann amp oldid 1214488959, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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