Ecological Strategies in Today's Art (part 2)
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Ecological Strategies in Today's Art (part 1). Ecomedia - Ecological Strategies in Today's Art, currently running at the Edith Russ Haus in Oldenburg, presents projects founded on progressive ecological models and conceive utopian horizons in the process.
Talking of which, there was a raft made of plastic bottles on the grass outside of the Edith Russ Haus building. It's Natalie Jeremijenko's office. At the exhibition opening, she invited people to jump on it and share with her their environmental anxieties. Best is to have a look at the video presentation that GOOD magazine made of the Environmental Health Clinic project. GenTerra, by Critical Art Ensemble with Beatriz da Costa, used a harmless form of gut E. coli to educate the public about genetically modified organisms. If you scroll down the page you'll be able to see a video of a GenTerra performance which is currently screened at Edith Russ Haus.
GenTerra is a fictional biotech company dealing with "transgenics" and driven by profit, but also by a sense of social responsibility. Products created through this process---for example, transgenically modified foods---have often caused controversy. GenTerra claims to produce organisms that help solve ecological or social problems
This form of participatory experience attempts to make the whole issue less abstract and distant and by doing so, it provides the public with the critical tools to reflect on how significant the transgenic issue is and how it is going to reflect their everyday life. The Critical Art Ensemble defense fund page informs that the FBI is still refusing to return most of the tens of thousands of dollars worth of impounded materials. The reason for that is that the art collective was using the harmless bacteria and materials in several of their projects, one of them is GenTerra. Andrea Polli had two projects in the exhibition, the beautiful The Queensbridge Wind Power Project is a video (which you can watch online) for transforming the Queensborough bridge into a site for gathering clean, renewable energy.
The second project she was showing is a collaboration with Joe Gilmore. N. is an artistic visualization and sonification of near real-time Arctic data. Franz John's Turing Tables takes live seismological data and turns it into pictures, sound and movement. Seismological institutes measure the vibrations of the Earth and exchange the data collected among themselves via automated internet-transfers. Turing Tables feeds into this human-machine-communication data stream and translates it into an installation which bathes visitors in audio renderings and projections of live measurements made by seismographs all over the world.
The project is not about the catastrophes that cause these movements in inhabited areas, but instead about the archaic feeling and consciousness that the earth is an organism, that it moves and that it can be understood as an organism in constant flux.
I liked 01.org's Reenactment of Joseph Beuys' 7000 Oaks, 2007. My first reaction when i saw the project was "oh! No, not flugly Second Life agaaain!" but this "synthetic performance" has the merit of bringing the spotlight on a very inspiring work. In March 1982, Beuys was at Documenta 7 in Kassel with a mission: planting of 7000 trees, each paired with a columnar basalt stone approximately four feet high above ground, throughout the greater city of Kassel. The last tree was planted posthumously in 1987 by is son. Beuys intended the Kassel project to be the first stage in an ongoing scheme of tree planting to be extended throughout the world as part of a global mission to effect environmental and social change; locally, the action was a gesture towards urban renewal. 25 years exactly after the planting of the first tree, Eva and Franco Mattes of 01.org (or rather their avatars) started stacking virtual basalt stones on Mattes' island in SL. SL inhabitants are invited to participate to the performance by placing stones and trees on their land.
Infossil had a huge banner hanging above the reception desk of the art space. The white on black text reflects about the dependence of electronic communication, that is of the "infossil", on the energy resources available, the fossil: coal. Also on show: Sabrina Raaf's Translator II: Grower was painting grass on the wall; EcoScope, a communication tool developed by Transnational Temps, provides a context for discussing environmental affairs; 10 Commandments for the 21st Century, by Tea Mäkipää; Iñigo Manglano-Ovalle's You don't need a weatherman; Christoph Keller's The Whole Earth, a projection on a weather balloon. White clouds over a blue sky form the perfect picture of the peaceful blue planet we live on, there's even piano music for perfect bliss. Every two minutes, a roaring aircraft brings us back to reality. Its passage takes one or two seconds but that's enough to spoil the idyllic vision (image); Yonic, a NGO working in Brazil to diminish pollution in the rain forest and find new solutions to old problems, showed the fanzine they publish on a yearly basis using handmade recycled paper.
Now that was a fantastic and energizing exhibition. If only we can get more people to see it, not just the already converted. Set of images. Related entries: Natalie Jeremijenko's talk at Stifo@Sandberg conference, They make art not bioterrorism. |
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GenTerra is essentially a participatory "theater" comprising a lab, computer stations displaying the company's informational CD-Rom, and a 






I wish I could visit this expo as well... Thank you for sharing.
I discovered the work of Sabrina Raaf on an interview on Cultural Chicago: http://architectradure.blogspot.com/2007/12/cultural-chicago-advertisement.html
Her piece Grower responds to the carbon dioxide levels in the air generated by human breath. It draws individual blades of grass along a wall in varying heights in accordance to the amount of carbon dioxide present. As such it functions as a real time display on people attendance to the art space!
I just want to point out some of the controversy around Beuys' 7000 Oaks project... In Male Fantasies by Klaus Theweleit, there is significant discussion of the mythology of "the natural man" in post WWI Germany, and how it contributed to the ideology of the Friekorps, who ultimately went on to found the Nazi party... Again and again, proto-nazi propaganda references myths of the green man, etc. In keeping with this, Germans created "Burial Forests" to memorialize fallen soldiers. Those of us who doubt the authenticity of Beuys' story of rebirth after his plane crash also tend to latch onto his willingness to appropriate Nazi imagery as grounds for criticism of his various actions. Ultimately, he seems to be reinforcing these myths of the natural man, and given his Nazi past, this is not necessarily a good thing. Anyway, just a thought...