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Win a Solo Exhibition in June 2026 + An Exclusive Interview!
Win a Solo Exhibition in June 2026 + An Exclusive Interview!

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By Mark Klett

Publisher: Radius Books
Publication date: February 2026
Print length: 160 pages
Language: English
Price Range:
Born from joint expeditions in 2023 and 2024, this book is the result of a collaboration between photographer Mark Klett and writer, critic, and cultural geographer William L. Fox, who traveled together to the remote mid-Pacific nation of the Republic of the Marshall Islands. Their journey was not simply geographic but historical and philosophical, shaped by conversations with residents, encounters with fragile landscapes, and reflections on the layered narratives embedded in the atolls themselves.

Expanding on ideas first explored in their earlier project The Half Life of History (Radius Books, 2011), the publication revisits the islands’ nuclear legacy in the aftermath of twentieth-century weapons testing while confronting the accelerating realities of climate change today. Rising seas, shifting coastlines, and memories of displacement form a visual and literary dialogue that bridges past and present, revealing how environmental and political histories remain inseparable.

Blending archival imagery with Klett’s recent photographs and Fox’s texts—ranging from lyrical journal passages to concise essays—the book constructs a layered narrative that moves between documentation and meditation. The islands become both subject and symbol, a place where global forces converge in intimate scale. Through this focused lens, the project invites readers to consider the far-reaching implications of nuclear ambition, ecological vulnerability, and human resilience, suggesting that the story of this small nation ultimately mirrors shared planetary futures.

Rather than offering conclusions, the collaboration opens a contemplative space in which image and language interact as equal witnesses. Attention is drawn to textures of coral, weathered concrete, and luminous horizons, each detail carrying traces of history and possibility. In this quiet interplay, the artists propose that careful observation can become a form of responsibility, urging viewers to recognize connections between distant territories and their own lives. Its message resonates far beyond the Pacific for all humanity today and tomorrow always.
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