GONE

Photographer removes our smartphones to show our strange and lonely new world

Out of hand.
Out of hand.
Image: Eric Pickersgill
By

Are you reading this on a handheld device? There’s a good chance you are. Now imagine how’d you look if that device suddenly disappeared. Lonely? Slightly crazy? Perhaps next to a person being ignored? As we are sucked in ever more by the screens we carry around, even in the company of friends and family, the hunched pose of the phone-absorbed seems increasingly normal.

US photographer Eric Pickersgill has created “Removed,” a series of photos to remind us of how strange that pose actually is. In each portrait, electronic devices have been “edited out” (removed before the photo was taken, from people who’d been using them) so that people stare at their hands, or the empty space between their hands, often ignoring beautiful surroundings or opportunities for human connection. The results are a bit sad and eerie—and a reminder, perhaps, to put our phones away.

Image for article titled Photographer removes our smartphones to show our strange and lonely new world
Image for article titled Photographer removes our smartphones to show our strange and lonely new world
Image for article titled Photographer removes our smartphones to show our strange and lonely new world
Image for article titled Photographer removes our smartphones to show our strange and lonely new world
Image for article titled Photographer removes our smartphones to show our strange and lonely new world
Image for article titled Photographer removes our smartphones to show our strange and lonely new world
Image for article titled Photographer removes our smartphones to show our strange and lonely new world
Image for article titled Photographer removes our smartphones to show our strange and lonely new world

Photos courtesy of Eric Pickersgill.

Clarification: This story has been updated, and the headline has been changed to make clear the phones were removed before each photo, not edited out later.