Weather as Medium
eBook - ePub

Weather as Medium

Toward a Meteorological Art

  1. English
  2. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  3. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Weather as Medium

Toward a Meteorological Art

About this book

In a time of climate crisis, a growing number of artists use weather or atmosphere as an artistic medium, collaborating with scientists, local communities, and climate activists. Their work mediates scientific modes of knowing and experiential knowledge of weather, probing collective anxieties and raising urgent ecological questions, oscillating between the "big picture systems view" and a ground-based perspective. In this book, Janine Randerson explores a series of meteorological art projects from the 1960s to the present that draw on sources ranging from dynamic, technological, and physical systems to indigenous cosmology.

Randerson finds a precursor to today's meteorological art in 1960s artworks that were weather-driven and infused with the new sciences of chaos and indeterminacy, and she examines work from this period by artists including Hans Haacke, Fujiko Nakaya, and Aotearoa-New Zealand kinetic sculptor Len Lye. She looks at live experiences of weather in art, in particular Fluxus performance and contemporary art that makes use of meteorological data streams and software. She describes the use of meteorological instruments, including remote satellite sensors, to create affective atmospheres; online projects and participatory performances that create a new form of "social meteorology"; works that respond directly to climate change, many from the Global South; artist-activists who engage with the earth's diminishing cryosphere; and a speculative art in the form of quasi-scientific experiments. Art's current eddies of activity around the weather, Randerson writes, perturb the scientific hold on facts and offer questions of value in their place.

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Yes, you can access Weather as Medium by Janine Randerson, Sean Cubitt in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Social Sciences & History of Architecture. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Series page
  3. Title page
  4. Copyright page
  5. Dedication
  6. Table of Contents
  7. Series Foreword
  8. Acknowledgments
  9. Illustrations
  10. Introduction: Weather as Media
  11. 1 Live Weather, Systems, and Science
  12. 2 Sensing the Weather
  13. 3 Weather Envisioning: Visualization and Mapping
  14. 4 Meteorological Art Instruments
  15. 5 Social Meteorology and Participatory Art
  16. 6 Climate Dialogues: Acts into Nature
  17. 7 Weather Materialized: Ice as Medium
  18. 8 Speculative Weathers: Cosmic Clouds and Solar Winds
  19. Conclusion
  20. References
  21. Index
  22. Color Plates