Artists' Role in Environmental Activism

As I sat down to write this, I scrolled through facebook to get a general snapshot of how my friends were feeling, and I saw articles posted with headlines stating that our president has allowed elephant trophy imports and mining waste to be dumped in our waterways. Every time we look at the news or social media, we see outrageous things -- signs of war, political buffoonery, environmental catastrophe, social inequity. The news paints a fragmented picture of us. The weight of just hearing about any one of these issues and finding ways to stand up for what we believe is right is immense. It can feel paralyzing even if we don't think we are directly involved in these issues. But, in fact, we are all connected.

Perhaps one of the most abstract issues - climate change - is also one of the most pressing issues of our time. Changes in our natural environment threaten not only the health and safety of every species living on the planet, climate change also threatens to tear apart the fibers of our communities. Even though human involvement in our warming climate has been suspected since as early as the 19th century, why has it been so hard to take steps to mitigate the damage we cause, and what can we do about it now?

For centuries, art has functioned as a release from everyday life. It distracts us, takes us to magical places, helps us feel connected with one another. Art gives us hope. But it is more than just that. 

The arts play a powerful role in raising awareness about issues. 

In Richard Heinberg's opinion article titled "As Climate Chages We Need the Arts More Than Ever" published on Ensia last month, he says that "As we move closer to what surely will be unprecedented ecological, economic and social disruption, meaningful art can and must express the turmoil we encounter and help us process it intellectually and emotionally."

He says, " Everything will be up for negotiation, redesign and change. And artists will have the opportunity and duty to translate the resulting tumultuous human experience into words, images, and music that help people not just to understand these events mentally, but also to come to grips with them viscerally... Art can help us cope with the implications of our collective challenges. It can help prepare society for a possibly traumatic future. It can give voice to suffering and loss, helping people deal with life’s inevitable stress. And it can also offer beauty, which can be especially important in hard times."

But art is more than a coping mechanism or an escape. Although I thoroughly believe in the capacity for art to serve as a method of individual and collective healing, art can also help us reach deeper understanding of environmental issues through different and multidisciplinary approaches. 

Art has the power to catalyze powerful movements.

The Earth Issue vol 1, editor Elena Cremona states that, "As a catalyst for change, art should not be ignored or underestimated." Through their craft, artists advance environmental awareness, comprehension, and change.

Since the late 1900s, artists have documented the natural beauty across this country, most significantly in our National Parks. As examples, the Hudson River School painters and Ansel Adams captured images of landscapes that have been used in conservation efforts, showing through photographs and paint the importance of preserving the last remaining wilderness. We can now compare these images with the current landscape, extending a viewpoint longer than our own lives. The award-winning documentary Chasing Ice chronicles photographer James Balog's quest to capture time-lapse images of the world's glaciers and ice sheets. Artists like these help to document ecological changes and relay them in ways that are beautiful, stirring, and troubling. Seeing changes through their eyes raises our own environmental awareness.

Other artists educate us in ways that reach us at the core of our understanding. Artist Zaria Forman creates monumental-sized drawings of glaciers from photographs that she has captured during various polar expeditions. By the time each drawing is complete, the glacier has either changed beyond recognition or has completely disappeared altogether. In a different work about ice, for the art installation of Ice Watch Paris, Olafur Eliasson and Minik Rosing installed 12 blocks of ice from glaciers, which melted away in a public square during the United Nations Conference on Climate Change in 2015. The public could directly interact with the ice, and was faced with its ultimate demise of melting away. These kind of works give us a deeper understanding than what is possible for scientific data alone. 

Yet, other artists ask us to reflect on our actions and make change. For his 2017 exhibition at the Minnesota Museum of American Art, David Hamlow's Mirror Stage confronts us with our own massive consumption, highlighting our personal contribution of waste within the larger issue of climate change. Agnes Denes makes us think about natural environmental cycles and stewardship of land with her groundbreaking environmental work, Wheatfield: A Confrontation (1982). Over the course of six months, a wheat field was planted in downtown Manhattan. The work produced 1,000 lbs of wheat, which was toured worldwide and eventually planted in locations around the globe. 

There is no question that works of art offer beauty, connection, and a way for us to process emotions. In addition, however, artists working with environmental issues have the opportunity to make a larger impact. It is up to all of us to create the world we want to live in, and artists and creative thinkers are best poised to design and re-design what that means. Now, perhaps more than ever, we live in a world that needs artists, creativity, and imagination in tandem with environmental and social activism. Let’s do this, together.

Changing location, elevation, and latitude

Originally published August 29, 2017

We took an impromptu trip out west through some of Colorado, Utah, and Wyoming. This trip reminded me that it's good to change your location, your elevation, and your latitude from time to time. Seeing different parts of our land makes me remember that we're really very small, yet we can accomplish so much. We must work together to save this incredible land.

We stayed at a primitive campsite south of Telluride and got to witness a bit of gorgeous alpenglow. This video doesn't do it justice, of course.

Why Mono-tasking is the new Multitasking

Originally published July 17, 2017

Bill Nye may be best known for his PBS children's show, Bill Nye the Science Guy, but has also been an incredible champion for science and involving the public in discussions about climate change.

In a recent article, here, he shares his thoughts on multitasking, information overload, and getting things done for real. "...If you want to be an effective agent of change, you also need to filter your sense of urgency." Nye talks about his new book, Everything All At Once, and using relentless curiosity to help solve not only climate change but any of society's future problems.

Read the whole article here. It's worth your time. 

...If you want to be an effective agent of change, you also need to filter your sense of urgency.
— Bill Nye

And, if you want some fun home science demos, check out his website at www.billnye.com.

How do Americans feel about Climate Change?

The New York Times posted an article on March 21, 2017 that showed through a series of six maps that, in general, Americans believe that global warming is happening and that carbon emissions should be cut.

The article, "How Americans Feel About Climate Change, in Six Maps," was based on research done by Yale University in a 2016 study. Check out the full set of interactive maps here. The results are fascinating, and you can even see detail down to the state and county level.

I'm really interested to see if this study is done again and how Americans feel about climate change in 2017, if anything has changed.

Image: Yale Climate Opinion Maps - U.S. 2016, Link: http://climatecommunication.yale.edu/visualizations-data/ycom-us-2016/

Image: Yale Climate Opinion Maps - U.S. 2016, Link: http://climatecommunication.yale.edu/visualizations-data/ycom-us-2016/

The End of Nature

Originally published March 11, 2017

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Wisdom from 1989:

"We have changed the atmosphere, and that will change the weather. ... We must act, and in every way possible, and immediately."
- Bill McKibbin

This book is blowing my mind that it was written almost 30 years ago.

Atmosphere and Advocacy

Originally published November 11, 2016

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Jumping into research for an upcoming project on climate change and atmosphere. I may not be able to understand everything that's in this book, but I hope to at least learn some basics to share with the rest of the world. I can't imagine a more important time in our history for environmental advocacy, and I plan to fight like hell... through my art.

Has this week brought out the fighter or advocate in you? If so, how will you act on those impulses? 

Activism and Efficiency

Check out On Being's latest interview with Parker Palmer and Courtney Martin on activism, efficiency, self-reflection and burnout. I loved this discussion's energy and urgency of its content. How can we make the world a better place if we covet efficiency over sustainability?

Click here to read the full article and post On Being.