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The Encoded
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Home
The Encoded
Photobooks
About
Photo Essays
Contact
Home
The Encoded
Photobooks
About
Photo Essays
Contact
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THE PROVOCATION

What is intelligence, actually?

We are living through the most intensive period of artificial intelligence development in human history. Every major institution on the planet is racing to build minds. The word intelligence has never been more discussed, more funded, more culturally urgent.

Meanwhile, on a frost-prone plateau in New South Wales, a butterfly that has been managing a three-way ecological relationship for three million years is disappearing. In a single river in Queensland, a turtle whose body accumulates the knowledge of one specific river across thirty years is running out of river.

These are not conservation stories. They are intelligence stories. And we are not paying attention.

Ten women woke up one morning carrying these creatures on their faces. Not metaphorically. Overnight — while they slept — the markings of ten critically endangered Australian species appeared on their skin. Nobody knows how.

We are building artificial minds while the oldest minds on the planet disappear. The Encoded asks what we lose when that trade goes uncalculated.

THE CREATURES

Ten forms of intelligence
the world is losing.

The ten species of the Southern Reckoning were not chosen for their charisma. They were chosen because they are the ones nobody is paying attention to — whose situations are too specific, too ecologically intricate, too far from the conservation mainstream to generate the attention they need. Six of the ten were believed extinct before someone looked more carefully.

CRITICALLY ENDANGERED

Green Carpenter Bee

Iridescent, irreplaceable, capable of a form of pollination no other bee can perform. Ninety-five percent of its habitat was destroyed in the Black Summer fires of 2019–20. The jewel of its ecosystem, nearly burned.

Brilliance without the ecosystem that sustains it is not brilliance. It is a performance of brilliance in a landscape that is quietly running out of the conditions the performance requires.

VULNERABLE

Richmond Birdwing Butterfly

Australia's largest subtropical butterfly, dying by confusion — drawn to lay its eggs on an introduced vine that mimics its native host but is toxic to its larvae. It cannot distinguish, by instinct alone, between what nourishes and what kills.


Knowing a thing and being free of it turn out to share almost no territory at all. The encoding did not give her new information. It gave her the same information running through her body rather than her mind.


CRITICALLY ENDANGERED

Mary River Turtle

Found nowhere else on Earth. Takes thirty years to reach reproductive maturity. Grows algae on its head like a living crown accumulated over decades. Was sold by the thousands as a disposable pet before anyone understood what it was.

The thirty years before the turtle is ready are not waiting. They are the becoming. And the becoming is the point. Patience is not what you practise while the real thing begins.

CRITICALLY ENDANGERED

Lord Howe Island Phasmid

Declared extinct in 1920. Found alive in 2001 — twenty-four individuals on a volcanic sea stack. Melbourne Zoo has since bred more than 14,000 nymphs. Eggs have been found in the wild on Blackburn Island. Natural reproduction, in a restored habitat.

Persistence is not the same as resilience. Resilience implies bounceback. Persistence is the refusal to stop existing even when everything has conspired toward extinction. Which is a different and sturdier thing.


CRITICALLY ENDANGERED

Golden Sun Moth

Spends twenty-five years underground as a larva before emerging as an adult with no mouth. The entire brief surface existence devoted to one act of continuation. Less than 1% of native temperate grasslands remain.

The encoding asked one question of the startup founder who carried it: what continuation are you actually serving? The moth burns through everything it has. That is not a template. It is a tragedy the encoding is asking her to understand, not repeat.

CRITICALLY ENDANGERED

Victorian Grassland Earless Dragon

Found nowhere else on Earth. Takes thirty years to reach reproductive maturity. Grows algae on its head like a living crown accumulated over decades. Was sold by the thousands as a disposable pet before anyone understood what it was.

The thirty years before the turtle is ready are not waiting. They are the becoming. And the becoming is the point. Patience is not what you practise while the real thing begins.


CRITICALLY ENDANGERED

Western Swamp Tortoise

Australia’s most endangered reptile. Ancestry stretching back fifteen million years. Aestivates for seven months of every year - retreating underground, slowing its metabolism to almost nothing, conserving everything it has until the right season returns.

The creature does not resist the hostile season. It becomes still and waits for the season that can sustain it. The aestivation is not the point. The emergence is.

ENDANGERED

Bathurst Copper Butterfly

Cannot survive without three things simultaneously: a specific plant, a specific ant, and the specific frost-prone terrain of the Central Tablelands. Three million years of refining a three-way ecological relationship. Remove any element and the butterfly is gone.

The ideology of self-sufficiency is not a philosophy. It is a failure to observe what has actually been working. The most extraordinary beings are often those whose survival is predicated on relationship.


ENDANGERED

Blue Mountains Water Skink

Exists only in highland peat swamps — ancient landscapes that form over thousands of years. The indicator species: when the peat swamp is healthy, the skink persists. When the swamp degrades, the skink vanishes. Its body is the swamp's own report on its health.

Truth in the body and truth in the data are not two versions of the same thing. They are the same thing, arrived at by different routes. The work of a life is to find the form that holds both without losing either.

ENDANGERED

Pygmy Blue-Tongue Skink

Believed extinct for thirty-three years. Found in 1992 inside the stomach of a dead brown snake. Lives in abandoned spider burrows in agricultural grassland that everyone had written off. Invisible not because absent — because no one knew how to look.

The question was never whether the thing worth finding was there. It was whether anyone would come looking with enough patience and humility to discover it.


THE ARTIST

BASED

Rushcutters Bay, Sydney

EQUIPMENT

Leica — exclusively

RECOGNITION

Prix de la Photographie, Paris — Multiple professional awards including Gold, Bronze, Honorary Mention

SUBSTRATE

Hahnemühle Photo Rag Baryta · 1500 × 1500mm

WRITING

Days to Live: An Aerial Perspective

Rand Intelligence

WEB

randfotografie.international

Rand
Leeb-du Toit

Rand Leeb-du Toit is a Sydney-based fine art photographer, painter, and interdisciplinary artist whose practice sits at the intersection of ecological intelligence, embodied knowledge, and the long history of looking carefully at things the world has given up on.

He shoots exclusively with Leica cameras and prints at large format on archival substrates. His portrait Worlds Within received an Honorary Mention at the Prix de la Photographie, Paris — the central visual gesture of that image, replacing the face with a celestial orb, directly informed the orb motif that runs through The Encoded as its only recurring mark.

His professional history spans AI research, technology leadership, venture capital, law, and published authorship. This cross-disciplinary foundation is not incidental to the project — it is the project's intellectual spine. The person who once built models for the future is now writing fiction and making images about what the future is destroying.



PRESS & MEDIA

For press enquiries:

randal.leebdutoit@gmail.com

Copyright, Rand Leeb-du Toit 2026