What Is Steady Anyway?
Julian Charrière, Marjolijn Dijkman, Raphaël Fischer-Dieskau, Andreas Greiner, Robert Gschwantner, Spiros Hadjidjanos, Almut Linde, Ulrike Mohr, Mazenett Quiroga, Marike Schuurman, Raul Walch
COLLAPSE IS NOT A DESTINATION
Project Info
- 💙 frontviews at HAUNT Kluckstraße 23 A / Yard D - 10785 Berlin
- 💚 Dr.Almut Hüfler and Stephan Klee
- 🖤 Julian Charrière, Marjolijn Dijkman, Raphaël Fischer-Dieskau, Andreas Greiner, Robert Gschwantner, Spiros Hadjidjanos, Almut Linde, Ulrike Mohr, Mazenett Quiroga, Marike Schuurman, Raul Walch
- 💜 Dr.Almut Hüfler
- 💛 Alice Stella
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COLLAPSE IS NOT A DESTINATION conceptualizes our planet in the Anthropocene as an endangered garden with finite resources, in which our activities have a profound impact on our basis of existence. On display are works from the fields of sculpture, photography and installation. Using found materials, they offer a long-term time dimension and point to the dilemma of the capitalist growth paradigm: that the long- term effects of our short-term profitable actions are not adequately taken into account. The consequences have long been clear: ‚technical fossils‘ such as aluminium, concrete residues, plastic particles, carbon com- pounds from the combustion of fossil fuels, fallout from nuclear bomb tests, etc. can be found in sediment layers, microplastics can be detected in bodily fluids - and the man-made climate catastrophe can no longer be denied.
This development has been known for more than half a century and was described in Limits to Growth, the first report by the Club of Rome in 1972. Since then, we need to ask ourselves: Why is it still not possible for us as a collective to take countermeasures and stop the destruction of our livelihoods that has long been predicted in models? Why is it that we cannot „see“ or recognize reality?
The report pointed out that the human perspective
is radically limited to what is close in time and space. Long-term or spatially distant effects do not seem relevant for decision-making, as we cannot grasp the complexity of the process and its dynamics in every- day life. At the same time, however, decisive changes for the entire process occur just there.
Dr.Almut Hüfler