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Art piece featuring orange and pink


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Pinkorange is a Dutch clothing brand, born on the island Vlieland. For every new collection, they invite artists over to the island. Inspired by the natural surroundings, these artists create a work of art that will be designed into timeless, high end clothing.

Artists

The brand draws inspiration from nature, thus it selects and invites artists to come do the same during an artist-in-residence. Their artworks are the foundation for every collection.

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If the Sky Were Orange: Art in the Time of Climate Change

A painting of a vast blue sky with lots of orange clouds over it. At the bottom is the beach front with waves lapping around

A painting of a vast blue sky with lots of orange clouds over it. At the bottom is the beach front with waves lapping around

This special two-part exhibition explores the history and contemporary urgency of climate-related issues. Guest curated by journalist Jeff Goodell, who has written extensively on the topic, If the Sky Were Orange is the first exhibition at the Blanton to explore one topic across several of the museum’s temporary gallery spaces.

The Contemporary Project and Film & Video Gallery feature work by ten contemporary artists addressing how climate change affects life on our planet, from how we create energy to the stability of ice sheets in Antarctica. Texts by Goodell and internationally known scientists and writers from The University of Texas at Austin and beyond interpret the artworks from the perspective of the authors’ specialized knowledge of climate change.

In the museum’s Paper Vault, works selected by Goodell from the Blanton’s collection complement and contextualize the contemporary works on view. Spanning centuries, the featured artworks demonstrate that many of the issues related to climate change today are not new. For example, artists have long addressed how humans both harmonize with nature and grapple with its unpredictable and monumental forces. They have explored energy as both an economic and cultural force, as well as what has been gained and lost by technological progress. While many of these works were not created in response to climate change, Goodell interprets the selections in light of our rapidly changing world.

The exhibition’s title, If the Sky Were Orange, is inspired by a large painting in the Blanton’s collection by Aaron Morse, Cloud World (#3) (2014), which features jarring, hot-orange clouds floating above a massive seascape. Goodell sees the painting as a striking visual metaphor for the greenhouse gases causing rising temperatures on our planet: Were those gases a visible color, he suggests, we would be far more aware of their presence in our atmosphere and thus their consequences for the Earth. A hotter planet and the related rise in sea levels are the two best-known issues around climate change, but the exhibition explores the complex interrelatedness of climate disruption and human knowledge and culture, including such benefits as the advancement of scientific research and related solutions like renewable energy and human and environmental adaptability.

Writers featured:
Amitav Ghosh
Jeff Goodell
Katharine Hayhoe
Elizabeth Kolbert
Sy Montgomery
Julian Brave NoiseCat
Olúfẹ́mi O. Táíwò
John Vaillant
Michael Webber
Amy Westervelt

Contemporary artists featured:
Julian Charrière
Jessie Homer French
John Gerrard
Amy Globus
Joan Jonas
Christine Sun Kim
Cannupa Hanska Luger
Aaron Morse
Sandra M. Sawatzky
Nyugen E. Smith
Jamey Stillings

Guest curated by Jeff Goodell. The organizing curator is Carter E. Foster, Deputy Director for Curatorial Affairs, Blanton Museum of Art, assisted by the curatorial staff and the 2022-2023 Modern and Contemporary Mellon Fellow.

A digital resource for this exhibition is also available. Click the button below to read an introduction by Jeff Goodell and navigate through the resources.

Colin Wynn
the authorColin Wynn

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