Published on Dec 25th, 2007 in New Work

Hapless flowers, windmills, trees, and small animals try to organize some type of response to climate change as a duper-hero clan of energy industry titans use their powers in the media and military to insure the supression of dissent and the continuation of their way of war. Lucha Neo-libre is Panel Junction #2 in calendar form, 12 pages of comic art influenced by user contributions through the artcontext.net website.
Originally by Deck from Artcontext Wire on December 25, 2007, 9:25am
/ calendar / earth art / environment / graphic novel /
Published on Oct 7th, 2007 in New Work

Converse with a chimpanzee about habitat problems, or discuss overfishing with a whale.
These are just two possible encounters in EcoScope, part of the Eco-Media exhibition in Germany (October 2007- January 2008). Produced by the international art collective Transnational Temps, this online forum also offers tools for sending quirky postcards to friends, either electronically or through your printer. You’re invited to come join the conversation. There’s content in EcoScope before you arrive, but half the fun is what you bring to it. Peer into the EcoScope!
Originally by Deck from Artcontext Wire on October 2, 2007, 5:43pm
/ earth art / environment / global warming / interactivity / public sphere /
Published on Apr 23rd, 2007 in New Work

Your Guide to Climate Threat Levels
This new advisory system clarifies the climate change threat levels facing people everywhere.
Climate Change Threat Advisory
Originally by Deck from Artcontext Wire on April 23, 2007, 3:47am
/ earth art / environment / global warming / net art /
Published on Dec 2nd, 2006 in New Work

This website documents Aquanode ‘06 events in western Turkey, near Bodrum. It features photographs and audio from the August, 2006 art events at the site of the ancient city of Myndos, now sunken below sea level. Transnational Temps traveled to this sea-level challenged city to find out what people are thinking about global environmental change.
Originally by Deck from Artcontext Wire on December 2, 2006, 1:12pm
/ art / earth art / environment / global warming / media / public sphere / tactical media /