Lea Schick is the editor and moderator of this debate forum. During the RETHINK exhibition she will facilitate the RETHINK ART discussions here on her blog. We will very much encourage you to participate in the debate!
Six Tools to make climate change art
Artist Franke James gives on her blog a recipe with six tools you need to make climate change art, and how to make a workshop to fulfill these tools. In continuation of the discussion about what good climate art is, I think it could be relevant to discuss these 6 tools and if they are covering the most important aspects of climate art?
The arts have a long tradition of engagement with issues in both the socio-political and environmental spheres. Art reflects contemporary and historical developments, challenges dominant paradigms, and asks key questions, raising awareness of powerful and controversial topics by highlighting both their essentials and their complexities. As a natural development of this tradition, many artists have inevitably addressed and continue to address climate change, a subject which with ever-greater urgency demands immediate and comprehensive action, and which promises dramatic changes for all of humanity, whether we face it successfully or not.
But is it possible to successfully apprehend and work with an issue as complex as climate change from an artistic, non-scientific angle? What role does and can art play in the all-pervasive challenge of climate change? Or conversely, is the widespread attention given to climate change today, with events like the 2009 UN Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen, merely providing artists an exotic and lively arena within which to work, with lucrative results?
We here encourage you to read about and discuss which role art as or will get in the increasing attention emerging around climate change.
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