Zero Waste
Waste is everywhere: in the Great Pacific garbage patch, as fine particular matter in the air, or as microplastics in the food chain. The group exhibition Zero Waste showcases international positions in contemporary art that point out the urgency to save resources, consume less, and live more sustainably. In diverse installations, videos, sculptural works, and photographs the artists investigate the global consequences of plastic packaging, tire abrasion, toxic chemicals, and the overproduction of consumer goods. Zero Waste will be realized by the German Environment Agency in cooperation with the MdbK and curated by Hannah Beck-Mannagetta and Lena Flie脽bach.
Every day shreds from the horticultural greenhouses in southern Spain, also known as 鈥淓l Mar de Pl谩stico鈥, drift into the sea 鈥 Raul Walch uses these remnants as material for his expansive kinetic objects. For their video work the artist duo Irwan Ahmett & Tita Salina transferred a small fish from a polluted water in Jakarta to a crystal-clear river. Erik Sturm scrapes fine dust from window sills along heavily trafficked streets for producing paint, whereas Swaantje G眉ntzel鈥檚 photographs and objects illustrate the effects microplastics have in cosmetics and on marine creatures. In his laboratory Dani Ploeger experiments with manufacturers鈥 intentional obsolescence of electronic devices, and Eliana Heredia鈥檚 installation works with disposable products and cleaning agents.
The exhibition takes a critical look at the current condition of our planet but also aims to imagine possible solutions, encourage alternative scopes of action, and propose visions for the future. While questioning the lifestyle of the international jet set as well as the lavish use of materials in the art world, the project follows self-imposed climate-friendly rules in an attempt to make its own carbon footprint transparent and to compensate it.
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Waste is everywhere: in the Great Pacific garbage patch, as fine particular matter in the air, or as microplastics in the food chain. The group exhibition Zero Waste showcases international positions in contemporary art that point out the urgency to save resources, consume less, and live more sustainably. In diverse installations, videos, sculptural works, and photographs the artists investigate the global consequences of plastic packaging, tire abrasion, toxic chemicals, and the overproduction of consumer goods. Zero Waste will be realized by the German Environment Agency in cooperation with the MdbK and curated by Hannah Beck-Mannagetta and Lena Flie脽bach.
Every day shreds from the horticultural greenhouses in southern Spain, also known as 鈥淓l Mar de Pl谩stico鈥, drift into the sea 鈥 Raul Walch uses these remnants as material for his expansive kinetic objects. For their video work the artist duo Irwan Ahmett & Tita Salina transferred a small fish from a polluted water in Jakarta to a crystal-clear river. Erik Sturm scrapes fine dust from window sills along heavily trafficked streets for producing paint, whereas Swaantje G眉ntzel鈥檚 photographs and objects illustrate the effects microplastics have in cosmetics and on marine creatures. In his laboratory Dani Ploeger experiments with manufacturers鈥 intentional obsolescence of electronic devices, and Eliana Heredia鈥檚 installation works with disposable products and cleaning agents.
The exhibition takes a critical look at the current condition of our planet but also aims to imagine possible solutions, encourage alternative scopes of action, and propose visions for the future. While questioning the lifestyle of the international jet set as well as the lavish use of materials in the art world, the project follows self-imposed climate-friendly rules in an attempt to make its own carbon footprint transparent and to compensate it.
Artists on show
- Alexander Oelofse
- Andreas Greiner
- Bianca Kennedy
- Chico Togni
- Christoph Medicus
- Dani Ploeger
- Eliana Heredia
- Erik Sturm
- Irwan Ahmett
- Kadija de Paula
- Klara Meinhardt
- Michel de Broin
- Mika Rottenberg
- Nadine Fecht
- Raul Walch
- Swaantje Güntzel
- The Swan Collective
- Tita Salina
- Tue Greenfort
- Vibha Galhotra
- Wolf von Kries
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Waste is everywhere: in the Great Pacific garbage patch, as fine particular matter in the air, or as microplastics in the food chain.