Thursday, May 14, 2009

Fridge Anthropology

This is an incredible and thought provoking set of pictures I just ran into on digg. I highly recommend that everyone checks out You Are What You Eat.

We purchase refrigerators the way we fill them: out of necessity—to preserve the milk; to keep the greens from wilting. But from the right vantage point, an open fridge is the perfect staging grounds for a discussion of consumption. And if the aphorism holds true—if we really are what we eat—then refrigerators are like windows into our souls. It’s that sentiment that’s at the heart of Mark Menjivar’s inventive exploration of hunger, “You Are What You Eat,” for which he photographed the contents of strangers’ refrigerators. As you can see, whether it holds neatly ordered rows of labels-out condiments or zip-locked stacks of shot-and-gutted buck meat, there’s almost certainly a narrative to a fridge’s arrangement.


This was my favorite picture, the snake is just one the many ridiculous things that the photographer has managed to capture.





Now go check out these pictures!