Monday, December 21, 2009

Climate change/eco artists

The Copenhagen debacle, in which our world leaders completely failed to see the bigger -non monetary- picture, has at least pushed climate change/the destructiveness of humans on nature back into the spotlight. Although there will always be cynics and strong debate as to our ability to measure climate change in the past through carbon testing/geology etc... it is hard to argue that we are GOOD for the planet. Especially at the moment with the number of endangered species, both plant and animal, rising and air and freshwater quality decreasing.

John Key needs his head re-screwed on. The financially driven shortsightedness of the national government is unbelievable, and they're destroying the 'clean green' image of New Zealand for one of our biggest industries- tourism. Not that we are clean or green, BUT we have the potential to be, and a large number of international visitors come to New Zealand to experience the nature of the country. Twitch.


So with that in mind, I've been browsing a few pretty cool exhibitions with a climate change/eco driven focus.






Acid Rain by Bright Ugochukwu Eke.

RETHINK — Contemporary Art & Climate Change is "an exhibition of 26 works created by trendsetting Nordic and international contemporary artists working in the intersection between art, culture and climate change."

It's interesting. I really like this quote, which comes from Bruno Latour's A Plea for Earthly Sciences which IMHO should be compulsorary reading for every literate adult on the planet....:

" Everything that earlier was merely given becomes “explicit”. Air, water, land, all of those were present before in the background: now they are explicitated because we slowly come to realize that they might disappear —and we with them."

Pretty much sums it up doesn't it?  There are a few more pictures on Greenmuze.


Royal Academy of Arts (UK) at the GSK Contemporary is currently running Earth: Art of a changing world

There's a neat little highlights gallery here. Interesting to see Cornelia Parker and Mona Hatoum in there. Parker's work in particular is an adaption of  what she's done before, but it's still effective. 


Find more videos like this on artreview.com

Antti Laitinen, who is also part of the exhibition at GSK,  is a Finnish artist, and you can see a fair bit of his It's My Island exhibition in the video above. 


All in all a lot to think about in relation to my own work + dissertation, and the honours proposal that I should be thinking up by January 5th.. hmmm..

1 comment:

  1. I disagree - Key doesn't need his head rescrewed on, he needs it lopped off.

    I'm disgusted by the money-first policies of the National Government although I know we shouldn't expect anything else from that lot. Part of me wants to trumpet New Zealand's environmental hypocrisy and failings across the internet, but then I stop and realise that that's not going to accomplish anything at all.

    I just don't get how people can be so short-sighted. Yes, I know that parents have mouths to feed, but so much of the problem is not in providing necessities for families but in acquiring unnecesssary luxuries.

    David Suzuki and other well known ecologists suggest we need to band together and treat the present environmental challenges as our grandparents treated the threats posed by WWII, if we make a concerted effort, and in so doing accept that it will be tough for a while but be content in the knowledge that we're investing in the world for the sake of future generations, we'll pull through. I wish it were so, but I'm not optimistic - I really don't think the people of the priveleged West are accustomed to making any sort of sacrifices anymore - we're so used to living beyond our means (economically and environmentally) that we'll fight to the death to keep our ipods and SUVs :(

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