A New Nature, Mark Dorf, 2021, Image Credit Mark Dorf
Organised by World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF), the inaugural China Climate Action Week Thematic Exhibition takes place at Inter Art Center & Gallery from September 10-25, 2022. With its theme WE ARE NATURE, this exhibition is programmed alongside China Climate Action Week (CCAW) and curated by Naiyi Wang.
WE ARE NATURE invites 15 pioneering artists from around the world to rethink their own dependence on nature, to examine the urgency of our global conditions, and to explore how artistic practices can effectively participate in and contribute to climate action. The CCAW manifests through exhibitions, public programmes, symposiums and audio-visual ecological expeditions, as well as structural and systemic initiatives, bringing together practitioners from the fields of art, science, climatology and geology, among many others.
WE ARE NATURE
“We often forget that WE ARE NATURE. Nature is not something separate from us. So when we say that we have lost our connection to nature, we’ve lost our connection to ourselves.”
—Andy Goldsworthy
We are an inherent community connected and dependent on nature’s pulse. But due to human activity, global warming has been escalating the fastest it’s ever been in recorded history. Humans have become a force of nature that cannot be ignored, as the cause and effect of our own destiny. Resource depletion, extreme weather, land droughts, melting glaciers, species extinction—these events not only test the economy, but all systems of human society. We are seeing their ripple effects turn into crashing waves of consequence.
Exhibition View
The most pressing issues we face today stem from the human hubris; we have assumed to be the "master of nature". We forget that humans and nature are an “entangled existence”, entwined in our woes and our joys, as we over-exploit and claim everything in nature for our own use. Nature and other non-human forces become arrogantly excluded from consideration of human actions. Nowadays, a difficult situation compels us to shift the dimension of anthropocentric thinking. If we remain immersed in an anthropocentric perspective, the diversity of nature's voices and these complex realities will undoubtedly be ignored, without taking into account the survival and rights of the "other". "The environment is alive, an ever-changing network of beings with their own purposes and interdependencies.” The consciousness of nature should be perceived and understood by human beings, because we share in its symbiogenesis, its worries, and its problems.
Micro-Sound, Qiu Yu, 2021, Image Credit Qiu Yu
Flock of Seals, Xiao Ge, 2015, Image Credit Xiao Ge
The Plant Intelligence Plan, Zhang Tianyi, 2021, Image Credit Zhang Tianyi
Before we can listen to the demands of nature, we need to know where we stand, what deep-rooted ideas we should leave behind, and how we should change our way of thinking. In "What is Nature", Ruth Wilson mentions that our existing definitions of nature lends the mistake of “[allowing] humans to view themselves as observers and explorers of the natural world, instead of being an integral part of it". There is clearly an inherent flaw in this antagonistic attitude, and it is urgent to overcome these isolating perspectives in order to truly realize the interdependence of human and nature. Only by understanding the fact that one needs to coexist with other animals, plants, and matter, can one truly listen to and respect all beings.
AquA(I)formings—Interweaving the Subaqueous, Robertina Šebjanič & Entangled Others (Sofia Crespo and Feileacan McCormick), 2021-2022, photo by Nejc Ketis/Kino Šiška
Transversal is a Loop: Cricket Farm, Saša Spačal, 2020, Image Credit Saša Spačal, photo by Maid Hadžihasanović
While it is true that both "human" and "non-human" are important subjects of action, human beings do not have the uniqueness of agency. The demands of the "non-human" may easily overlooked by anthropocentric subjectivities, but non-human agency cannot be underestimated. In the face of ecological crises, nature is telling us that ignoring it will lead to greater disasters—far beyond an individual life span. As people exploit and seize without restraint, nature is giving us its powerful, durational warning.
Beyond Earth, Carla Chan, 2022, Image Credit Carla Chan
The precarious condition of our environment concerns all living things. Our fates are bound to these all-altering phenomena, these asymmetrical encounters, and uncertain moments. In the face of climate crisis, WWF in China (headquartered in Switzerland) launches the China Climate Action Week Thematic Exhibition, inviting 15 pioneering artists from around the world to address climate emergencies, and to explore how art practices can be a subversive tool to change people's perception and behavior towards climate change.
About the exhibition
WE ARE NATURE
China Climate Action Week Thematic Exhibition
Dates: 2022.9.10—2022.9.25
Venue: Inter Art Center & Gallery
Organizer: World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF)
Official Advisor
Center for Environmental Education and Communications of Ministry of Ecology and Environment
Academic Advisor: Central Academy of Fine Arts (CAFA)
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Participating Artists:
Carla Chan, Mark Dorf, MY PERSISTENCE, Jia Xinyu, Liu Tong, Qiu Yu, Saša Spačal, Robertina Šebjanič & Entangled Others (Sofia Crespo and Feileacan McCormick), Su Yongjian & Ba Ruiyun, Xiao Ge, Zhang Tianyi
(in alphabetical order)
CCAW Team
Lin Zhenhan, Li Shixin, Ma Ji, Liu Muyang, Li Xiaojia, Gong Liyuan,
Li Lei, Yang Jun, Jin Xin, Gu Caiyun, Jiang Li, Yun Hao
Curator: Naiyi Wang
Assistant Curator: Yuhang Sun
Technical Coordinator: Wang Donghan
Exhibition Design: Ma Xin, Sun Chuyang
Visual Design: another design
Exhibition Graphic Design: Che Zhiming
Exhibition Coordinators: Li Zixuan, Wu Liya, Li Shangru, Jin Zhengxun
Courtesy China Climate Action Week.