Point Reyes National Seashore
Waves crash on Kehoe Beach as seen from Kehoe Trail.
Photographer: Daniel Dietrich

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Point Reyes National Seashore
Waves crash on Kehoe Beach as seen from Kehoe Trail.
Photographer: Daniel Dietrich
My son poking around and napping at the beach today. Kehoe Beach.
Good morning 🌞
Worldview: One Piece at a Time
Worldview: One Piece at a Time
Guest post by Judith Selby and Richard Lang
Judith Selby and Richard Lang are artists who collaborate in an ongoing project to collect plastic along Kehoe Beach in the Point Reyes National Seashore. They also recount their adventures in Plastic Forever, the blog they jointly manage. This is a follow-up post to last week’s Snaphot on Seeing the Woods. All photographs are courtesy of the authors.
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Guest post by Judith Selby and Richard Lang
Judith Selby and Richard Lang are artists who collaborate in an ongoing project to collect plastic along Kehoe Beach in the Point Reyes National Seashore. They also recount their adventures in Plastic Forever, the blog they jointly manage. Stay tuned for the follow-up post on their work on Seeing the Woods.
A casual diversion—an amusement—turns into an enthusiasm, turns into a life’s work.
Why create art out of the tons of plastic we’ve found? Why make these objects and show them in an art context? And since we want our art to engage the polity, to inspire action, are we simply making more propaganda?
At first glance, our project is about evidence gathered to address the consequences of marine born plastic garbage in our oceans. The evidence, in this case, has been gleaned from just one beach: Kehoe Beach in the Point Reyes National Seashore, Northern California. But it is about more than that. It is the story of being witness to how a creative life is lived. It’s not about creative arts, per se. That yes, but it’s also about the implications creative energy has for any endeavor.
Sometimes, beauty can be a call to action. Here the call to action is to follow some simple rules of planetary housekeeping; but in a larger sense, the call to action is to follow those strange voices of inspiration each of us possesses, if we dare to listen. We know after years on the beach and in the studio, the real opposite of beauty is indifference.
This is part one of a two-part post about Judith and Richard’s ongoing work collecting and transforming waste into art. For related content about the journey and transformation of waste, take a look at our RCC Perspectives volumes: Out of Sight, Out of Mind and A Future without Waste?
Snapshot: Plastic Beach Guest post by Judith Selby and Richard Lang Judith Selby and Richard Lang are artists who collaborate in an ongoing project to collect plastic along Kehoe Beach in the Point Reyes National Seashore.
A lovely day. I'm still learning how to shoot in bright sunlight (I greatly prefer overcast days) mostly because it's hard with a baseball cap, sunglasses, and the bright light washing everything out but it's fun experimenting. Trying to maintain consistency, too.
I look like an album cover from the 90s. Go Bears.