ArtAsiaPacific

Fluid Futures

In 2020, the Point examines how our cultural and sociopolitical systems are implicated in climate change, and what actions the arts industry can take. Below, Nadia Christidi discusses what artistic imaginaries can contribute to climate-change solutions.

Over the past five months, I have been studying water planning in Dubai. I have considered the potential impacts of climate change on water and the future of the resource as it is being imagined and prepared for by policymakers, engineers, and scientists, while also grappling with proposals

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from ArtAsiaPacific

ArtAsiaPacific3 min read
Hong Kong
Tai Kwun Contemporary Comics, illustrations, graphic novels, and animations are seldom exhibited at art museums, as many of these mediums still rely upon traditional narrative structures of storytelling. Likewise, although their discernable visual id
ArtAsiaPacific3 min read
Eora/Sydney
At first glance, Eora/Sydney’s art scene appears more robust than ever. Over the summer, the city hosted three blockbuster exhibitions—for Vasily Kandinsky, Louise Bourgeois, and Tacita Dean—as part of the Sydney International Art Series held across
ArtAsiaPacific4 min read
London
Hayward Gallery In 1974, Hiroshi Sugimoto was standing in front of a large diorama at the American Museum of Natural History in New York when he had a sudden revelation. Conceding that the backdrops looked fake, he noticed that by “taking a quick pee

Related Books & Audiobooks