8586833

Tiina Törmänen. Underwater Wonderland.

Regular price$275
/
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Size

Tiina Törmänen (Finland) floats through sheets of cloud-like algae in search of fish.

Tiina was thrilled to meet a school of curious European perch on her annual lake snorkel. During the previous three years, she had only ever found dead fish. Submerged in the surreal scene, she framed the orange-finned fish flying through clouds of pink-tinged algae.

Although it created a beautiful scene, algal blooms like the one captured here can cause problems for underwater life. A common cause of algal blooms is pollution, most often from fertilisers present in agricultural run-off or sewage. This enriches the water with nutrients, causing the algae to flourish, use up the oxygen in the water, block out sunlight and sometimes produce harmful toxins.

Yet this lake is in the middle of the wilderness, with no conceivable source of pollution. Recently, the summers in Lappland have been unseasonably warm, and the lake water has been unusually tepid, which suggests that global warming rather than pollution was behind this algal bloom.

Tiina Törmänen is a Finnish photographer who started with documentary-style film portraits and later embraced digital. Her work is meditative and multidimensional, focusing on the atmospheric landscapes of boreal forests and arctic highlands. In 2018, she ventured into underwater photography.

Follow Tiina on Instagram @tiinautti.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.