Unlearning Intolerance: Art, Attitudes & Environment

United Nations Headquarters, New York City, 2008.

El Anatsui_untitled .for unep show

El Anatsui, Untitled, 2008, aluminum & copper wire, 1.7m x 2.5m (variable)

The Unlearning Intolerance art exhibition, Art, Attitudes & Environment was created in 2008 for the UN’s Unlearning Intolerance Seminar Series and centered on the intolerance of our treatment of our earth and the attitudinal and behavioral changes that must be made in order to protect it. The topics of global warming and environmental preservation are currently at the heart of the development agenda, with governments, intergovernmental organizations, businesses and civil society all faced with the challenge of protecting our environment as a means of achieving true human security on a global scale. In the current era, in which scare tactics are most frequently used to generate social action, a unique approach is needed to inspire the general public to take responsibility for our collective future. Artistic expression inspired by our natural environments is a strong emotive way to strengthen community engagement in conservation and preservation.

The works of art featured in this exhibit were created by seven extraordinary artists/activists whose work draws attention to the environment. They hail from vastly different, yet, as their art demonstrates, ultimately connected parts of the world. The regions they individually represent are Africa, Asia and the Pacific, Latin America and the Caribbean, Europe and North America, and Western Asia.

Exhibition Artists: El Anatsui–Nigeria; Ichi Ikeda–Japan; Subhankar Banerjee–India; Philippe Pastor–Monaco; Cecilia Paredes–Peru; Catherine Chalmers–US; Noor Al-Bastaki–Bahrain

Participating Venue: United Nations Headquarters, New York, NY

cecilia parades

Cecilia Parades, Costa Rica, 2008, photo on aluminum, 49 x 47 in

Chalmers_Drinking

Catherine Chalmers, Drinking, 2000, c-print, 45 x 30 in