Interactive site specific light installation located @ Outer Hebrides
From Medium by World Ocean Observatory
Lines (57° 59′ N, 7° 16’W) — a breathtaking art installation in Scotland
brings attention to projected sea-level rise by showing the projected
height of sea-level rise
Recent studies in Science
and other journals have shown that existing projections of sea-level
rise have been extremely conservative.
New projections, in light of
ocean warming that is 40% higher than previously estimated, show that
sea-level rise will become a challenge much sooner than expected.
CNN
and the New York Times have
reported extensively on the effect of sea-level rise on the low-lying
Marshall islands, a US territory whose president last week announced a
new plan to raise the islands, in order to avert the worst.
These news
reports rarely receive the attention they deserve, due to the nature of
our current political climate in the U.S. and worldwide.
However, two Finnish artists this week punched through the news cycle with stunning images of their new art installation, showing a brightly lit line mounted on buildings in a town in Scotland, lying on one of the Hebridean islands.
Pekka Niittyvirta and Timo Aho describe their artwork:
“By
the use of sensors, the installation interacts with the rising tidal
changes; activating three synchronized light lines by the high tide.
The
work helps us to imagine the future sea level rise in undefined period
of time, depending on our actions towards the climate warming.
The
installation explores the catastrophic impact of our relationship with
nature and its long term effects.
The work provokes a dialogue on how
the rising sea levels will affect coastal areas, its inhabitants and
land usage in the future.
Loch Maddy with the GeoGarage platform (UKHO chart)
This
is specifically relevant in the low lying island archipelagos like the
Uist in the Outer Hebrides off the west coast of Scotland, and in
particular to Taigh Chearsabhagh Museum & Arts Centre in Lochmaddy
where the installation is situated.
The centre cannot develop on its
existing site due to predicted storm surge.
We
will let these stunning images speak for themselves, a terrific,
terrifying example of breathtaking art in the service of a powerful,
vital message highlighting — it seems appropriate to say — how the
future of the ocean is inextricably tied to our own.
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