The New York Times

The Art World Explores Concrete Ways to Fight Climate Change

Published: Oct 25, 2024 Crawled: Jan 31, 2026 at 3:44 PM Length: 347 words
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This article is part of the special section on the art world stretching boundaries with new artists, new audiences and new technology. Visitors to the Hammer Museums show will be greeted by powerful works portraying the widespread impact of ecological degradation: photos of citizens in Flint, Mich., waiting for clean water, a painting of a fish created out of spilled crude oil and contaminated sediment. But increasingly, museums are realizing that presenting artwork that addresses the climate crisis is not enough they also must consider their own impact on the environment. So, Hammer visitors wont know that most of the art items were shipped by ground or sea, rather than air, resulting in far less carbon dioxide emissions. Or that the exhibition catalog was printed using which comes from forests managed in sustainable ways, and wrapped in translucent paper rather than the typical plastic shrink wrap. It would absolutely be hypocritical for us to put on a show about climate change without questioning our implication in climate change, said Glenn Kaino, a Los-Angeles-based conceptual artist and co-curator of the show, which runs through Jan 5. The Hammer exhibition is part of e, a series of events taking place through mid-February 2025 at about 70 museums, science institutions and other spaces across Southern California. Museums and galleries have long shown artworks related to the climate crisis, but in recent years, there has been more of an urgency for directors and curators to look at the environmental cost of heating, cooling and lighting their buildings and packing, shipping and exhibiting their shows. That also includes examining the ecological toll of using imported materials or artists from distant shores rather than local artwork and artists. We are having trouble retrieving the article content. Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings. Thank you for your patience while we verify access. If you are in Reader mode please exit and your Times account, or for all of The Times. Thank you for your patience while we verify access. Already a subscriber? . Want all of The Times? .

Article Details

Article ID
16795
Article Name
climate-change-museums
Date Published
Oct 25, 2024
Date Crawled
Jan 31, 2026 at 3:44 PM
Newspaper Website
nytimes.com