Nurdles are almost impossible to see until one learns what they are and how to differentiate them from a grain of sand or a fish egg. Once known, one sees numbers of them scattered across the sand. Nurdles are the raw plastic material that is shipped to manufacturers of bottles, car parts, toys, almost anything made of plastic. The real danger with nurdles is their absorptive capability. They are tiny magnets for metabolites, PCB's, breakdown products of DDT—DDE and other dioxin-like substances. They are poisonous little bombs loaded with tens of 1000's of times more poison than the ambient sea, and because they are translucent they are mistaken for fish eggs, they enter the food chain.
Along with the news about BPA and the chemicals leaching into our food from plastic we have learned that every human being on planet Earth has traces of plastic additives in their bloodstream. Our high resolution enlargements of nurdles make visible what we are feeding to ourselves and to our children.
Dr. Hideshige Takada at Tokyo University and his International Pellet Watch invites beach combers to send nurdles for chemical analysis. Here are charts showing what is in our nurdles from Kehoe Beach. Although DDT has been banned in the United States since 1972, it is still showing up in the nurdles we find.
2012 Flows to Bay Museum of Monterey, Monterey, CA
2012 OUT TO SEA? PLASTIC GARBAGE PROJECT>>> TRAVELING EXHIBITION Organized by the Museum für Gestaltung, Zürich, Switzerland traveled throughout Europe and the Middle East until 2019.
2018 ECO Echo: Unnatural Selection Works, San Jose, CA
2019 ECO Echo: Unnatural Selection Gallery Route One, Point Reyes, CA
2019 Here is the Sea Richmond Art Center, Richmond, CA
2020 Castaways: Art from the Material World Bateman Foundation, Victoria, BC
2020 The Great Wave Bedford Gallery, Walnut Creek, CA