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Puerto Vallarta News NetworkEditorials | Environmental | August 2007 

Spencer Tunick Gets Hundreds Naked on Glacier
email this pageprint this pageemail usAnne Richardson - Reuters
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Hundreds of naked people pose in front of the Aletsch glacier near Bettmeralp, Switzerland, Saturday Aug. 18, 2007. (AP/Keystone/Laurent Gillieron)

(AFP/Fabrice Coffrini)

(AP/Keystone/Laurent Gillieron)

US photographer Spencer Tunick gives instruction to naked volunteers during a shoot on the ice-cold Swiss glacier of Aletsch. (AFP/Fabrice Coffrini)
Aletsch Glacier, Switzerland - Hundreds of people posed naked on Switzerland's shrinking Aletsch glacier for US photographer Spencer Tunick as part of a Greenpeace campaign to raise awareness of global warming.

Tunick, perched on a ladder and using a megaphone, directed nearly 600 volunteers from all over Europe and photographed them on a rocky outcrop overlooking the glacier, which is the largest in the Alps.

Later he took pictures of them standing in groups on the mass of ice and lying down.

Camera crews were staged at five different points on the glacier to take photographs.

Glaciers are sensitive to climate change and have been receding since the start of the industrial age but the pace of shrinkage has accelerated in recent years.

The environmental group Greenpeace, which organised the shoot, said the aim was to “establish a symbolic relationship between the vulnerability of the melting glacier and the human body”.

The Aletsch descends around the south side of the Jungfrau mountain in the Upper Rhone Valley. Alpine glaciers have lost about one-third of their length and half their volume over the past 150 years.

The Aletsch ice mass has retreated by 115m in the last two years alone, said Greenpeace.

Tunick has staged mass nude photo shoots in cities across the world, from Newcastle, Britain, to Mexico City, where a record 18,000 people took off their clothes in the Mexican capital's Zocalo square in May.

Speaking to Geneva's Le Temps newspaper in an interview published before the shoot, Tunick said his photographs were both works of art and political statements.

“I will try to treat the body on two levels. On an abstract level, as if they were flowers or stones.

“And on a more social level, to represent their vulnerability and humanity with regard to nature and the city and to remind people where we come from.”

Switzerland has about 1800 glaciers and almost of them are losing ground.

Greenpeace said if global warming continued unabated, most glaciers would disappear from the Earth by 2080.



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