Sustainable art may also be understood as
art that is produced with consideration for the wider impact of the work and
its reception in relationship to its environments (social, economic,
biophysical, historical and cultural).
History
According to the contemporary art
historians and curators Maja and Reuben Fowkes, the origins of sustainable art
can be traced to the conceptual art of the late 1960s and early 1970s, with its
stress on dematerialisation and questioning of the functioning of the art
system. They also connect the rise of the concept of sustainability to the
ending of the Cold War in 1989 and the emergence of a new awareness of the
global character of ecological and social problems. Sustainable art adopts,
according to these authors, a critical position towards some key practitioners
in the land art movement of the 1960s, who showed little concern for the
environmental consequences of e.g. treating the landscape like a giant canvas
with a bulldozer for a brush. They have questioned the polemical division
between 'autonomous' and 'instrumental' art originating with modernism, arguing
that it is 'autonomy that gives art, as well as artists as social actors, the
potential to be free and able to offer alternatives to dominant ideological
paradigms.'
Since 2005 there is a Sustainable Arts
Biennale running at Ihlienworth near Hamburg ,
Germany ,
curated by the German conceptional artist and curator Samuel J. Fleiner. There
are a range of interpretations over the relations between art and
sustainability, besides the term 'sustainable art' promoted by Pooo and Reuben
Fowkes: Other authors prefer the broader notions of 'sustainability arts' or
'art and sustainability' (e.g. Kagan and Kirchberg). Still others explicitly
rejected the use of the term 'sustainable art', referring instead to 'artistic
work that inspires us to think about sustainability" (Margot Käßmann).
Professional discussion of the relationship
of contemporary art to notions of sustainability blossomed across Europe in the
early years 2000, with e.g. the conference of the German Society for Political
Culture (Instituts für Kulturpolitik der Kulturpolitischen Gesellschaft e.V.),
in January 2002 at the Art Academy of Berlin, and the 'Tutzinger Manifest'. An
International Symposium on Sustainability and Contemporary Art took place at
Central European University, in Budapest (Hungary) in March 2006. This was the
first in a series of international symposia organised by Maja and Reuben Fowkes
bringing together contemporary artists, philosophers, environmental sciences
and acvitists to explore common ground around issues such as 'Exit or Activism'
(2008), 'Hard Realities and the New Materiality' (2009) and 'Art, Post-Fordism
and Eco-Critique' (2010).. In March–April 2007 at the Leuphana University
Lüneburg, the Arts Research Network of the European Sociological Association
focused its attention on the recent movements and approaches to 'arts and
sustainability' at its biennial conference.
Key texts in the emerging field of
sustainable art include 'Kultur - Kunst - Nachhaltigkeit' (2002) by Hildegard
Kurt and Bernd Wagner, ‘The Principles of Sustainability in Contemporary Art’
(2006) by Maja and Reuben Fowkes and
'Art and Sustainability' (2011) by Sacha Kagan. A collection of
interdisciplinary analyses of the arts and cultures with relationship to
sustainability is available in 'Sustainability: a new frontier for the arts and
cultures' (2008) edited by Sacha Kagan and Volker Kirchberg.
Exhibitions devoted explicitly to
"sustainable art" include e.g. ‘Beyond Green: Towards a Sustainable
Art’ at the Smart Museum in Chicago
in November 2005. For an analysis of the conflictual politics of sustainability
and the ambiguity of the term sustainability (which oscillates between
"ecological sustainability" and "economic sustainable
development," see TJ Demos, “The Politics of Sustainability: Art and
Ecology” (2009). For a recent account of the multi-faceted role of contemporary
art in highlighting environmental issues, expressing criticism towards
unsustainable factors in society, and offering imaginative solutions for the
achievement of sustainability, see Maja and Reuben Fowkes's essay on 'Art and
Sustainability' in Enough for All Forever (2012).
Modern Sustainable Artists
Modern sustainable artists include artists
who are using non-toxic, sustainable materials in their art practices as well
as integrating conceptual ideas of sustainability into their work.
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