Nathalie Miebach, “Build Me a Platform”
How does it feel to inhabit an irreversibly damaged planet? An exhibition opening at the this summer brings together works by ten artists and collectives that answer this question through data, color, tactility, and material.
Curated by Colossal, At the Precipice: Responses to the Climate Crisis considers physical and emotional reactions in the era of environmental disaster and emphasizes how art can offer an accessible entry point into such an overwhelming and dire emergency. Varying in medium and methodology, the works included explore several of the most urgent issues affecting the world today.
returns to the early Common Era to visualize how rapidly our climate has changed in the last few centuries alone, while and consider the impacts of a warming world on glaciers and arctic regions. , , and are concerned with the increasing intensity of weather events and subsequent forced migration, and and look to shifts in rivers and access to water sources. questions loss, remains, and acts of remembrance, while offers a localized and scalable solution to waste.
At the Precipice runs from July 14 to October 30. We’ll be announcing talks, workshops, and other programming in the coming weeks, so stay tuned for details.
Help Us Knit a Century of Chicago Weather!
As part of the exhibition, the Design Museum of Chicago has generously kickstarted a Chicago Tempestry Collection, which will use twelve knitted works to highlight changes in the local weather patterns during the last 120 years. Anyone interested in creating a tempestry—a tapestry depicting daily temperatures—to be added to the collection and displayed at the museum can purchase a kit on .
Morel Doucet, “Black Maiden in Veil of Midnight” (left) and “Olokun” (right)
Zaria Forman, still from “Overview: 12 Miles of Lincoln Sea in the Arctic Ocean, North of Greenland”
Migwa Nthiga, “The Warriors Of The North”
Selva Aparicio, “Our Garden Remains”
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