An ongoing series of moving image artworks from our new geological epoch. Anthropocene art, exploring global warming, climate engineering, and other anthropogenic influences on our environment. Part of a PhD exploring how video art might approach the overwhelming spatiotemporal dimensions of climate change.
Viewing entries tagged
Works 2019-
An interactive 360º from a small, low-lying Solomon Islands seaweed-farming community. Beginning with a view of the village children forming an “SOS” for their fast-eroding island, users can move around 360º VR in a stunning aerial panorama, clicking on hotspots to find documentary stories about Beniamina and Pacific Ocean sea level rise, climate adaptation, resilience, sustainable (carbon negative) agriculture, and so forth.
In an era when digital videos can be created in any shape, why do so few filmmakers stray beyond the four corners of the familiar cinematic rectangle? Where are all the jellyfish-shaped films?!
Iceberg and sea-ice works filmed in Greenland, May 2018.
During Covid-19 I found myself marooned for 3 months on a small, rocky, windswept island in the Norwegian North Sea called Utsira. Locals let me quarantine in the isolated lighthouse keeper’s quarters which seemed an archaically apt safe harbour to ride out the coronavirus storm. I was asked to do a “lockdown residency” and provide a video art piece each day.