"Earth: Art of a
changing world" presents new and recent work
from more than 30 leading international contemporary
artists, including commissions and new works from the
best emerging talent (Until 31 January 2010).
Recent debates have centred less on the possibility and
more on the certainty and speed with which climate
change will take place. As the debate has developed, so
too has our approach to the future. Co-curated by
Kathleen Soriano, Director of Exhibitions at the Royal
Academy, David Buckland, Director of Cape Farewell, and,
Edith Devaney, Royal Academy, this exhibition will reflect
the impact of the climate change debate on the
practice of a broad range of contemporary artists across a
wide variety of media.
Many of the artists featured are actively engaged with the
issue itself, working directly to transform the global
scale of climate change into a human narrative. Others
have shown it to have a place, or to resonate, within
their work. Earth will interconnect ‘issue’ and ‘art’, and will
present works that are beautiful, powerful and
thought-provoking. The exhibition will build on the power
of the individual works to create an overall aesthetic,
visual and experiential impact that explores some of the
cultural impacts of climate change.
The exhibition will introduce the key elements that make
up the natural world, and the activities that affect the
planet’s fragile equilibrium. Works by artists including
Ackroyd & Harvey, Spencer Finch, Antony Gormley,
Mona Hatoum, Marcos Lutyens & Alessandro Marianantoni,
Semiconductor and United Visual Artists engage
with the earth, air, sky, nature and carbon elements to
encourage a deeper consideration of our cultural
relationship to earth’s stability.
Artists such
as Antti Laitinen, Edward Burtynsky, Gary Hume and David
Nash will represent our contemporary
world and will invoke a dialogue around the perceived
security of our existence.
At the centre of the show, a group of exhibits will elucidate
the role of the artist in the cycle of human and
cultural evolution – as communicator, reflector and
interpreter of key issues of the day. Within this section
artists such as Darren Almond, Sophie Calle, Tacita Dean,
Kris Martin, Lucy + Jorge Orta, Cornelia Parker, the
poet Lemn Sissay and Shiro Takatani hold up a mirror to
our changing world, producing work that will
encourage us to examine the issues from a variety of
angles, to reflect and question. Other works will confront
the viewer with the consequences of human behaviour
through natural disasters and physical collapse,
counterpoising the beauty of the planet with the damage
that is being inflicted upon it.
The exhibition concludes with works that present a world
of vision and of hope, but through the glass of reality.
These works will reflect notions of beauty and inspiration
fundamentally re-defined by climate change. This
subtle shift represents the first major change in our view
of the world since the first ‘whole earth images’
emerged as photographs taken from Apollo 8 in 1968, an
image that anchors our contemporary perception of
the beauty and fragility of the earth that has germinated
new notions of care and empathy for our habitat.
Works by artists such as Tracey Emin, the writer, Ian
McEwan, Mariele Neudecker, Keith Tyson and Emma
Wieslander will offer insight, vision and hope, responding
powerfully to this cultural shift, some with a
celebration of beauty and what we stand to lose. These
artists approach this shift from various perspectives:
some engaging with the rigour of scientific endeavour,
others through the use of imagined worlds, film and
music, delving into the emotional understanding of
knowledge.
In the pictures from above:
Antti
Laitinen, It's My Island I, 2007. Video. Image
courtesy the artist and Nettie Horn. Photo Antti Laitinen
Mona
Hatoum, 'Hot Spot', 2006. David Roberts Collection,
London. Photo Stephen White, Courtesy White Cube
Edward Burtynsky, Super Pit #4, Kalgoorlie, Western
Australia, 2007. © The artist, courtesy Flowers, London
Mariele Neudecker, 400 Thousand Generations,
2009. Courtesy the artist and Galerie Barbara Thumm. ©
the artist. Photo courtesy the artist
Antti Laitinen,
It's My Island I II & III, 2007. © the artist. Image courtesy
the artist and Nettie Horn. Photo Antti Laitinen
Cornelia Parker, Heart of Darkness (detail), 2004.
Courtesy the artist and Frith Street Gallery, London