Posts Tagged ‘Anthropocene’
From Space to the Deep Sea: ‘Poles of Inaccessibility’ at Galerie im Turm
by Annalisa Giacinti // July 28, 2023
‘Pole der Unzugänglichkeit’ (Poles of Inaccessibility) is the continuation of the exhibition series ‘Schwindel’ (Vertigo), which initiated a critical analysis of humanity’s…[read on]
Letter from the Editor: Wilderness
by Alison Hugill // July 4, 2023
Is the very definition of art (and its relationship to artifice) an antithesis to wilderness? Through our upcoming interviews and exhibition reviews, we hope to scratch the surface of what…[read on]
‘Earth Indices’ at HKW Obscures Rather Than Illuminates
by Moses Hubbard // Oct. 15, 2022
Given the extent to which Bruno and Linke are aware of the significance of this program, and the effort that they have made to define a useful position within it, ‘Earth Indices’ itself…[read on]
Systems of Care: An Interview with Michael Wang
Interview by Jack Radley // Apr. 10, 2020
Michael Wang unearths the intertwined roots of plant, animal and human histories. Working between his upstate New York studio and his Governors Island residency, Wang traces…[read on]
Art in the Time of Corona: A Solitary Encounter with Daniel Steegman Mangrané’s ‘Fog Dog’
Article by Dagmara Genda // Mar. 27, 2020
It could be cynical to say that Daniel Steegman Mangrané should consider himself lucky for the chain of events that have made ‘Fog Dog’ at Esther Schipper even more alienating, uncanny and strange…[read on]
Climate Change // Imagining Sustainable Futures: An Interview with Nicole Dextras
Article by Katharine Doyle in Berlin // Aug. 11, 2017
Increasingly, artists are being called upon to represent viewpoints on climate change into their work; this artistic phenomenon champions environmental awareness on various levels, whether in its material…[read on]
Climate Change // The Anthropocene and the Sublime: Emilija Škarnulytė’s ‘MANIFOLD’ at Decad
Article by Katharine Doyle in Berlin // Jul. 18, 2017
“But…what if…the lens itself were an entity? An entity so large that we were utterly dwarfed by it? An entity that we might even be inside of?” Timothy Morton’s accompanying text to the exhibition…[read on]