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Project Eco Runway
Designing and constructing clothing has become a vanguard creative
act. Numerous contemporary eco-artists are using clothing to instigate radical environmental
and social reforms. This lecture explores the innovative functional and
expressive roles that clothing is being assigned within the environmental
movement. They represent the work of some of today’s most original artists.
Beautiful vs. Beautifully: Ecological Imprints on Language
Are microbes, fungus, and corpses beautiful? Ecological
concepts of beauty extend far beyond the immaculate surface and geometric
purity that characterize human technologies. Eco-beauty embraces all aspects of
the life cycle – decay as well as growth. By incorporating such challenging
notions in works of art, contemporary artists convey that the far-reaching
implications of today’s environmental movement by redefining common
vocabularies and reformulating popular values. The lecture will explore art's
vital role in bringing language and social values into alignment with sustainable
practice.
Cycle-Logical Art: Recycling Matters in Art and Ecology
Eleven pioneering artists design ingenious schemes to create art that utilizes materials from the waste stream, avoids creating waste, and raises awareness of sustainable material choices. Since their material strategies apply to the production of all products, their works of art models for cultural reform.
EnvironMentalities: Contemporary Eco-Artists as Preservationists, Conservationists, Deep
Ecologists, EcoFeminists, Urban Ecologists,.. .......
There is no tablet
etched with a definitive environmental moral code. Environmentalists may behave
like shepherds of the planets life-forms, technical designers of the planet’s
systems of production, managers of the planet’s habitats, healers of the
planet’s infirmities, emissaries of the planet’s wonders, avengers of the
planet’s spoilers, curators of the planet's resources, and many other
positions. Multiple “EnvironMentalities” are being adopted, defined, applied, and
promoted by the remarkable artists discussed in this lecture. As
Preservationists, Conservationists, Deep Ecologists, EcoFeminists, Urban
Ecologists, etc, they are formulating ethical and functional environmental
strategies to assure the continuance of life on Earth.
ECOcentric Topics: Pioneering Themes for Eco-Art
Celebrate the invention of a new word and its application to the production of
art. “Ecocentric” describes thoughts and behaviors that are habitat-
centered. The new word challenges attitudes that are species-centered (anthropocentric) and self-centered (egocentric). Each of the ten artists examined in this lecture apply ecocentrism to such fundamental components of consciousness as “nature,” “desire,” “globalism,” “power,” “death,” etc. The artworks they produce manifest the revolutionary transformation in cultural values that accompanies the adoption of ecocentric considerations.
Are Microbes, Fungus, and
Decomposing Corpses Beautiful? Eco-Beauty / Eco-Art
Ecological concepts of beauty
extend far beyond the immaculate surface and geometric purity that characterize
human technologies. Eco-beauty embraces all aspects of the life cycle – decay
as well as growth. By incorporating such challenging notions in works of art,
contemporary artists convey the far-reaching implications of today’s
environmental movement to the public. The lecture will explore art's vital role
in bringing social values into alignment with sustainability.
Contemporary Art and the Primordial Sun
This lecture examines the work of artists exploring current interactions between humans and the sun. Three contrasting facts about the sun guide their creations:
- Sun is the source of all the food ever eaten, all fossil fuel in existence, and all oxygen ever found in earth’s atmosphere.
- The total amount of solar energy striking the United States in twenty minutes on an average summer day is sufficient to meet the country’s energy needs for an entire year.
- Changes are occurring in the atmosphere that shields the earth from excessive ultraviolet radiation and protects the earth from becoming a raging inferno like Venus or a frozen wasteland like Mars.
Animal. Anima. Animus.
Eight contemporary artists seek to reclaim kinship with animals that is typically associated with pastoralists, hunters, herders, and fishers. This rapport is not common in cultures where people encounter animals as pets, meat, nuisances, dangers, or zoo occupants. Artists include Marina Abramovic, Xu Bing, Dennis Oppenhiem, Carolee Schneemann, and others.
Preposterous Propositions: Artists as
Visionary Engineers
- A human oil press that uses dead bodies to
replenish depleted supplies of fossil fuels.
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Engineering the human genome to create a new breed of humans in which submissiveness
becomes a dominant trait that prevents further hostile take-overs of the
natural environment.
- Toy
robot dogs that are altered to sniff out hidden sources of radiation and other
contaminants.
Each of
the preceding statements attests to the fact that artists are occupying the
forefront of technological potentiality. Their unfettered imaginations are
inventing strategies that exist outside the parameters of official design /
science / technological / engineering protocols. Artists are propelling these
professions into uncharted territories of energy use, resource management, and
waste cycling.
The remarkable environmental artists presented in this lecture conjure alternatives to the status quo that match the
scale of the problems confronting civilization and its earthly home. Since
solutions are often found within boundless speculation, artists play a vital role in
determining survival prospects.
Blind Art? Blind Art!
Five fully-sighted artists integrate blindness into their creative process defying the famous dictum by Leonardo DaVinci, “The eye is the window of the body through which it… enjoys the beauty of the world.” Why do these sighted artists withdraw from seeing?
What aspect of the human condition or the state of the world are these artists communicating about our time in history?
Free Radicals:Why Do Artists Innovate?
Art is a visual embodiment of a cultural condition. Artists who were contemporaries of Thomas Jefferson reflected the values derived from an era of coaches, home-baked bread, and quill pens. Today’s artists are in tune with cyberspace, mega hurts, digital imagery, microsecond communications, virtual reality, cloning, satellite transmissions, space explorations, and environmental degradation.
Janine Antoni: Affliction and Release
Antoni embodies plights that beset people who enjoy material abundance and social opportunity, especially middleclass women.
I Am an Artist Because………: Defining Your Artistic Mission
By selecting a profession as amorphous as art, each artist is at liberty to choose to be a trickster, philosopher, mentor, prophet, saint, prankster, documenter, commentator, interpreter, designer, inventor, dreamer, theorist, critic, role model, idealist, pragmatist, beautifier, and so forth.
Art Pedagogy: Teaching an Unruly Discipline
Art exists without boundaries, without qualifying characteristics, without established standards, and without a definition of itself. This lecture presents ideas about selecting the content and skills to help students navigate this amorphous field of operation.
Avant-Garde Art: You Are an Expert
Check your expectations about art in the museum cloak room and explore contemporary art wrapped in contemporary experience. You may discover that vanguard art looks odd if it is compared with historic art, but it looks normal when compared to surfing the internet, worrying about global warming, using nano-technologies, globe-trotting, etc.
Choice: Opportunity? Burden? Privilege? Curse?
Citizens in the contemporary environment confront an unprecedented proliferation of options provided by the media, the marketplace, and the Internet. It has not always been possible to choose a profession, a place of residence, a partner, a religion, a style of dress, and so forth. Art maximizes alternatives. It is essentially limitless.
Art What Thou Eat: Images of Food in American Art
Grouping art works chronologically according to theme generates a visual record of American social history as seen through the eyes of each period’s most astute observers – its artists. The themes include rituals, technology, markets, packaging, lunch-breaks, death, sexuality, and so forth.
The Maximal Implications of the Minimal Line
A straight line, the single most elementary visual unit, is the formal denominator that unites the surprisingly diverse work of fifty-eight artists from the 1960-1980s. They dramatize that the extreme reduction that characterizes the aesthetic code of Minimalism inspired intense creativity and enabled artists to convey concepts related to gender, nature, and industry with wit, humor, elegance, and/or banality.
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