I took my first pictures of the Rhône Glacier in July 2014. I remember climbing up the mountainside along the edge of the glacier to get a better view. I came across a couple of alpinists up there. We chatted briefly.
It probably occurred to me on account of their Basel dialect, at any rate I mentioned that many more people had gone to see the covered cherry trees in Riehen near Basel back in the day. They had seen the trees too. But I immediately noticed they found it an odd comparison. At the time, the covered glacier made a very tidy impression. The blankets were nice and white, stretched taut, the ice beneath them voluminous. The covered part of the glacier clearly stuck out above the rest of the tongue of ice in front. The function of the blankets, which was to shield the ice, along with the ice grotto beneath it, from solar radiation, was plain to see.
When I came back a fortnight later, everything looked different. There had been a storm and lots of rain. Some of the blankets were torn off, shredded, dirty. The glacier was a pitiful sight to behold. Above all, and I’m sure I wasn’t mistaken, the tongue of ice had shrunk massively.
The last pictures were taken in August 2017. The photos are deliberately underexposed to make them more colorful, since the fabrics are actually colorless. In processing the photos I corrected the exposure and increased the contrast, especially for those shot in diffuse light.
– Hansjörg Sahli