Recyclers
![](https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/fe7db3ad74895ba3ffff296fa4fcf527743e6e79fa2130dfbd0f72f2ca4682c7/IMG_4759_2.jpg)
![](https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/77832859fee6756e4cf71952b64b24c216eba52b936d4a720543909d9ed2b606/IMG_4760_2.jpg)
![](https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/08f30330ff833a8fb0d11e3ecaf793e509ac2a04c9b1c68e08f075c564b57229/IMG_4755_2.jpg)
![](https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/c4ee40d008ada31ec9d1588f6d38d1d6b2d74e0408cbebc27ea1614acd33240a/IMG_4765_2.jpg)
![](https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/d35aecbbba9fe1aedec1c55b487f5fae8e253aad21efc25608e22f8341b9f5ed/IMG_4763_2.jpg)
Along the Dutch coast, sand intertwines with asphalt which has been poured to reinforce the coast as well as the waste left by humans, creating a new landscape where nature is absorbing, digesting, and co-exists with the intrusion of human activity.
Based on this phenomenon, <Recycler> attempts to speculate on a post-Anthropocene landscape in which man-made landscapes, human waste and the natural environment are entangled with each other.