The Photo Ark
The Photo Ark is a National Geographic project which has the goal of photographing all species living in zoos and wildlife sanctuaries around the globe in order to inspire action to save wildlife.
The project has been documented in a series of books and in a three-part documentary first shown on PBS and then released to home video. A selection of photographs from the project has been exhibited in various museums, zoos, and exhibition halls around the world. The documentary, RARE: Creatures of The Photo Ark, was awarded the Best Conservation Film award in 2018. The Photo Ark was featured on American television program 60 Minutes, with the episode first airing on October 14, 2018.
Goals and progress
The Photo Ark project, led by Joel Sartore in association with National Geographic, is a multiyear effort to document the approximately 12,000 species living in zoos and wildlife sanctuaries. Its goal is to inspire action through education, and help save wildlife by supporting conservation efforts.According to a February 2017 press release by National Geographic, one half of Earth's animal species could go extinct by 2100. "Joel Sartore... is acutely aware of this devastating reality and is passionate about protecting our planet's animals." Regarding the scope of the project, Sartore said: "The logistics of pulling off a project of this scope is numbing at times. The travel, the long hours, the setup and teardown of our mobile photo studio… it wears me down just thinking about it".
In a February 2017 interview with NPR, regarding the issue of him being able to complete the project before retirement, Sartore said: "I will be greatly relieved when all this is done, but I figure another 15 years or so, that's what it's going to take. No matter what, I'm going to get it done if I can still do it, if I can still walk and talk and shoot".
Sartore says that National Geographic sees themselves as responsible stewards of the environment, and says that they are in it for "the long haul". He said that he believed that if he could get the project started, National Geographic would see its value, and he believes that they have. Since starting the project, Sartore says several species he photographed are now extinct: a rabbit, a fish, an insect, and the Rabbs' fringe-limbed treefrog. "It saddens me greatly, but also angers and inspires me to want to give everything I've got to this project, and use extinction as a wake up call. As these species go away, so could we."
The first animal to be photographed for the project was the naked mole-rat living at the Lincoln Children’s Zoo. As the project progressed, National Geographic reported on its status during significant milestones:
- On September 14, 2017, National Geographic reported on the 7,000th animal photographed for The Photo Ark, the Leadbeater's possum, a critically endangered marsupial which is native to the acacia forests of central Victoria in Australia.
- On May 4, 2018, National Geographic reported that the 8,000th animal had been photographed; it was the semiaquatic Pyrenean desman.
- On December 24, 2018, National Geographic reported on the 9,000th animal photographed for The Photo Ark, the Bandula barb, a colorful but critically endangered fish found in one stream in Sri Lanka.
- On May 15, 2020 National Geographic announced that the 10,000th animal had been photographed: the güiña, which is the smallest wildcat in the Americas. National Geographic reported that "This pivotal milestone means that Sartore is about two-thirds of the way toward completing the National Geographic Photo Ark."
Project origins
In a February 2018 interview, Sartore said that he began the Ark project about 12 years ago when he was caring for his three young children while his wife was being treated for cancer. During that time, he started to think about what he might do with the second half of his life and career to make a difference. "That's how the Ark got started, and I've been going at it ever since."
In an April 2018 interview, Sartore said he had been a National Geographic photographer for over 27 years, and although he worked for 15 years doing various conservation stories, the impact was not enough to "stop the extinction crisis". So he realized that maybe "very simple portraits lit exquisitely so you can see the beauty and the color, looking animals directly in the eye with no distractions, would be the way to do it."
''The Photo Ark'' and related books
The project has been documented in a series of books:- Rare: Portraits of America's Endangered Species . Precursor to The Photo Ark project.
- Animal Ark: Celebrating our Wild World in Poetry and Pictures
- The Photo Ark: One Man's Quest to Document the World's Animals
- Birds Of The Photo Ark
- The Photo Ark Vanishing: The World's Most Vulnerable Animals
''RARE: Creatures of The Photo Ark''
In a February 2018 interview, RARE director Chun-Wei Yi said that he met Sartore at National Geographic Television & Film, in 2006 or 2007, soon after what was to become the Photo Ark had started. He says he was blown away by the impact that eye contact with an animal could have on someone. When asked if any of the locations presented significant obstacles to filming due to remoteness or ruggedness of terrain, Yi commented on the "unimaginable amount of work" that the scientists and rangers on the front lines of conservation perform, and they do it in some of the world's harshest conditions. In the course of making the series, the 5,000th species was photographed: a Persian leopard in Budapest.
In that same interview, Sartore was asked if having the project filmed would help raise the profile of these endangered species even further. Sartore said "the more coverage the better." He related that the Photo Ark project is a public awareness campaign that will run for many decades because:
Episodes
Documentary scheduled for 2020
In February 2019, it was announced that National Geographic and WGBH-Boston had joined forces to produce a "two-hour event special" about The Photo Ark, which would air on October 17, 2020.Exhibitions
In September 2017, the Eli and Edythe Broad Stage in Santa Monica presented the first event of the National Geographic Live series during The Broad Stage's 2017–18 season. The event was called "Building the Photo Ark with National Geographic Fellow and photographer, Joel Sartore". The event included a post-show Q&A session with Sartore.To spread awareness of this project, a selection of photographs from The Photo Ark has been exhibited in various museums, zoos, and exhibition halls around the world, including the following locations:
Beginning in 2017
- Auditorium Parco della Musica, Rome, Italy
- Cincinnati Zoo and Botanical Garden, Cincinnati, Ohio
- Dallas Zoo, Dallas, Texas
- Henry Doorly Zoo and Aquarium, Omaha, Nebraska
- Hickory Museum of Art, Hickory, North Carolina
- Melbourne Zoo, Melbourne, Australia
- National Museum of Wildlife Art, Jackson, Wyoming
- San Diego Natural History Museum, San Diego, California
- National Stadium, Warsaw, Warsaw, Poland
- The War Memorial of Korea Museum, Seoul, South Korea
Beginning in 2018
- Los Angeles Zoo and Botanical Gardens, Los Angeles, California
- Ned Smith Center for Nature and Art Amphitheater, Millersburg, Pennsylvania
- Museon, The Hague, Netherlands
- Museum of Natural History, Porto, Portugal
- Woodland Park Zoo, Seattle, Washington
- Annenberg Space for Photography, Los Angeles, California
Endangered Species Day
Awards
In February 2018, RARE: Creatures of The Photo Ark was awarded Best Conservation Film at the New York WILD Film Festival, held at The Explorers Club in Manhattan.Reaction
, who is the vice chair on the board of directors for Conservation International, wrote the foreword for The Photo Ark: One Man's Quest to Document the World's Animals, saying that this book "focuses a lens on the individual threads in nature’s tapestry."Jane Goodall praised The Photo Ark saying: "This is one of the most scientifically important — and artistically brilliant — books ever."
Mike Norton, executive vice president of Norton Outdoor Advertising wrote in Billboard Insider that "In this era of division and hyper-partisanship, Photo Ark is a uniting cause. Photo Ark has earned support and respect across the political spectrum, from Harrison Ford to hunters."
In March 2017, Publishers Weekly reviewed The Photo Ark, commenting that the photos use black-and-white backgrounds to highlight the animals, and snapshots of the photographing process are included as well. The article says that "Sartore more than succeeds in his goal to provide people with an opportunity to become aware of these animals, many endangered, before they disappear."
In July 2017, The National Press Photographers Association reported that Sartore’s goal is to photograph animals before they go extinct, but surmises that he may run out of time for many species. "It has taken 10 years so far to photograph about 6,500 of the estimated 12,000 species he wants to record. Sartore estimates it will take him 15 more years to finish... The first batch appears in 'The Photo Ark,' and its assortment of creatures is fascinating... will change the way you think of turning a field or forest into the next mall or housing development."