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Dear friends,

Hello, and happy April! Thanks to your enthusiasm, the Burning Worlds newsletter subscriber list has grown exponentially. This is great news! But it also means that keeping this thing going is getting expensive. So I've created a Patreon account. Contributions are entirely voluntary--no one's getting kicked off the subscriber list, and anyone wanting to subscribe in the future can do so for free. If you do decide to donate, thank you--sincerely--for your support.

This month I have for you a two-person interview with Finnish artists Timo Aho and Pekka Niittyvirta, who recently collaborated on an installation in Scotland entitled Lines (57° 59′ N, 7° 16’W); it brings greater awareness to the risks of sea-level rise. Both artists have created previous works that speak to large, systemic issues, such as humanity's relation to technology and the markets. With Lines, installed at the Taigh Chearsabhagh Museum & Arts Centre in Lochmaddy on the island of North Uist, they explore our relation to nature and the catastrophic impacts of climate change.

Per Pekka's website: "By use of sensors, the installation interacts with the rising tidal changes; activating on high tide. The work provides a visual reference of future sea level rise." The effect is quite chilling.

I hope you enjoy our chat as much as I did!

Until May,

Amy

PS - If you enjoy this newsletter, please spread the word by sharing this link. Thank you!
 
INTERVIEW WITH ARTISTS TIMO AHO & PEKKA NIITTYVIRTA
   

Amy: Please tell me about your light installation at the Taigh Chearsabhagh Museum & Arts Centre in Lochmaddy, Scotland. What inspired this project? And what do you hope viewers take away from it?

Timo & Pekka: The inspiration for the artwork derived from a connection and co-existence between contemporary society, urban development, and oceans. We started the project within the context of physical positions of seaside communities and their futures. The process quickly took turned towards the causality of climate change.

After looking at the theme from various angles, we concluded we'd make an artwork discussing this very relevant issue in seaside communities around the world. Highlighting the future predictions of sea-level rise with LED visually resonates with contemporary consumer society, and at an individual level.

We were hoping to pinpoint an important issue by the means of art: Art carries the potential to convey complex ideas, concepts and scientific data in a powerful way that other mediums, like texts or graphs may fall short of.

Amy: Have you collaborated before on art projects?

Timo & Pekka: We both have collaborated before with other artists and appreciate the synergy, both at the practical and conceptual levels. Working collaboratively often leads to new and surprising solutions.

Working as a team allows us to undertake larger entities. Collaboration also allows for larger capacity both in concept development and production stages.

We discussed working together on some other concepts and ideas, but this was the first project to be actualized. We have known each other since childhood through skate- and snowboarding. During the project we were working from different locations, Timo from Scotland and Pekka from Finland. Distance meant long conversations on Skype, contemplating the process from various angles.

Amy: Both of you have created works that speak to large, systemic issues, including humanity’s relationship to technology, economics, and various social structures. Why focus now on sea-level rise, a consequence of climate change?

Timo & Pekka: We both share an interest in the workings of contemporary society and its related phenomena. In the last decade or so, climate change has been a part of wider discussions about consumerism and economic growth.

As individuals, members of communities, and participants in history, we feel it is only natural that these themes filtrate our artistic practice.

Amy: Do you think about issues of climate change beyond what you create in your art?

Pekka: I tend look these issues nowadays from the perspective of a father. What kind of environment (nature or political) are we leaving for the generations to come? Can we sustain peaceful development and democracies? Climate change will probably be the biggest globally destabilizing factor in the future. Even today most of our global crises derive from a scarcity of resources and livable land.

Timo: I spent a big part of my past life as a professional snowboarder and have also spent a lot of time in coastal areas. The physical changes in the seasons and extreme weather are already present, as well as coral bleaching, glacial retreat, and the start of the sixth mass extinction. What will be the future of this planet within the next few hundred years? It seems that even with the facts provided by leading scientists, we have been incapable to react on this important topic that will affect us all.

Amy: You both are located in Helsinki. How would you characterize the ways in which your city—or Finland more generally—is talking about climate change?

Timo & Pekka: The conversation is divided. Now especially, when parliamentary election is at hand in April, these topics are used and exploited for political agenda. Amid all the talk and promises, Finland is making strange decisions concerning carbon sinks by increasing clearcuttings and its usage of minerals.

Amy: What’s next for you?

Timo & Pekka: As the original title of the work, Lines (57° 59 ́N, 7° 16 ́W), suggests, this is an artwork that can be executed in alternative coordinates. Hence, we have conceptualized possible variations of the Lines at different locations.

We are currently working together on a concepts for site specific installation dealing with geopolitics, mining/minerals and borders in the arctic region bordering Finland, Norway and Sweden.

Besides collaboration we are both working on our own projects. Timo is working on a solo exhibition coming up this summer, which explores urban semiotics and visual pollution. He’s also working on a piece for an environmental/land art exhibition thematically dealing with geodiversity, environment, and sustainability.  

Pekka is working on the last iteration of his exhibition trilogy, a multi-year project consisting of thematically linked exhibitions. The trilogy discusses growth of the global market economy as well as geopolitical and economic tensions by means of omnipresent control, judicial manipulation, and the landscape.

Photo of Lines (57° 59′ N, 7° 16’W) courtesy of the artists.

To learn more about these artists and their work, check out their respective websites: Timo Aho and Pekka Niittyvirta


The Burning Worlds newsletter interviews are syndicated monthly on Artists & Climate Change.

April's "Burning Worlds" Column

For this month's Burning Worlds column over at the Chicago Review of Books I speak with poet Kristin George Bagdanov about her latest collection, Fossils in the Making, and the role of poetry more generally in an age of climate change.
 
More on Lines by Timo Aho and Pekka Niittyvirta

Want to learn more about Lines and see more images of this amazing installation? Check out this review over at The Colossal. 
5 Writers on Climate Change in Pop Culture

Last December I sat down with writers Roy Scranton, Ashley Shelby, Omar El Akkad, Jeremy Deaton, and Michael Svoboda to discuss climate change in pop culture. Read a transcript of the event (and watch a video of highlights) over at Guernica.
My Review of McKibben and Rich's Latest Books

Over at Pacific Standard I review Bill McKibben and Nathaniel Rich's latest books.
"How Janet Laurence's art compels you to save the earth"

A wonderful profile on the Australian artist over at The Guardian.
An Art Installation That Makes You Feel and Smell the Toxic Fog of Polluted Cities

A fascinating look at a new installation called Pollution Pods by British artist Michael Pinsky, over at Quartzy.

 
17 Writers on the Role of Fiction in Addressing Climate Change

Over at Literary Hub, I asked 17 writers and editors--including Richard Powers, Lydia Millet, Omar El Akkad and others--about the roles fiction and poetry play in an age of climate change.
 
ABOUT THE EDITOR: Amy Brady is the deputy publisher of Guernica magazine and the senior editor of the Chicago Review of Books, where she writes a monthly column called “Burning Worlds.” It’s dedicated to exploring how contemporary fiction addresses issues of climate change. This newsletter expands that project by looking at the work of artists in all mediums. Amy’s writing on literature, culture, and the environment can be found or is forthcoming in The Village Voice, the Los Angeles Times, Pacific Standard, The Dallas Morning News, McSweeney’s, Literary Hub, and elsewhere. To learn more about Amy’s work, visit her website: AmyBradyWrites.com.
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This newsletter may be duplicated and forwarded as long as it remains unaltered and is replicated in its entirety. 

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Information contained in “Burning Worlds” is collected from many sources and is researched to the best of the editor's ability. Readers should verify information. 
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"Burning Worlds" logo designed by Cheryl Burke (www.TheoryOneDesign.com).

 
Copyright © 2018 Burning Worlds, All rights reserved.

Our mailing address is:
Amy Brady
223 Bedford Avenue #1003
Brooklyn, NY 11211


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