A tornado has scrambled the contents of a small town square, leaving upturned automobiles, lopsided telephone poles and a confused cow planted smack in the middle of very unfamiliar patch of grass.Cracked yellow instrument panels, rusty dials and broken gauges are all that remain of a nuclear power plant control room, devoid of human presence in the aftermath of a meltdown.
A glowing orange fire blazes through jagged black trees, rushing in a fury towards a tiny aluminum camper, its inhabitants ignorant of the impending danger. No, these bizarre scenarios are not plucked from obscure science fiction novels, surrealist dystopias or old folk tales; they are grounded quite solidly in the real world. Except that world is three feet tall. The scenes are dollhouse-sized dioramas, meticulously created and photographed by artist Lori Nix.While her work often coincides with current...
Image courtesy of Lori Nix |
exhibitedAccidentally Kansas
The CityThis article is provided by Scienceline, a project of New York University's Science, Health and Environmental Reporting Program.
Image courtesy of Lori Nix |
Image courtesy of Lori Nix |
Interested in reading more?
Become a Member of
Receive full access to more than 35 years of archives, as well as TS Digest, digital editions of The Scientist, feature stories, and much more!