this post was submitted on 20 Jul 2024
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Every day for the last two weeks, Johannes-Harm Hovinga has sat at a raised table in Museum Arnhem, using a two-hole page puncher to systematically perforate the 7,705-page sixth assessment report produced by the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).

He has printed it out on coloured paper and the result is a vibrant heap piling up at the artist’s feet.

Hovinga remains completely silent during each performance in the Netherlands-based museum. He drinks water, but doesn’t eat, with bathroom breaks his only intermission.

“We are at a crucial turning point in history,” says Hovinga, “where the consequences of climate change are becoming increasingly evident. Rising temperatures, extreme weather events, biodiversity loss and microplastics are just some examples of what our planet faces.”

The artist calls his living piece The Elephant in the Room. It is an artistic protest, meant to illustrate the lack of urgency by policymakers and global leaders. Hovinga believes in the power of creative expression to help raise awareness and persuade people to take a stand.

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[–] bitfucker@programming.dev 3 points 3 months ago (1 children)

I think that would decrease the artistic value and the message impact. There is just something about an actual human doing something that could send a message via art that a machine just cannot replicate.

[–] mke@lemmy.world 3 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

Not sure about using the term artistic value to refer to this, but I think I get the point and agree.

I find a human toiling away—even in silence—a lot harder to ignore than a machine. It seems much more fitting for the name "The Elephant in the Room," making that entire room uncomfortable yet hesitant to speak out.

The way I see it, his work is saying: let's make everyone feel that discomfort more and more, until they truly understand this problem isn't going away and needs to be talked about now.

...And not like the UN does it.

I dig it.