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Climate Activists Create Art That Can Be Seen from Spaceby Bryan FarrellTuesday, November 23, 2010 at 08:30 AM ESTWhat's being called "the first planet-scale group art show" began over the weekend, as climate activists in several countries gathered to create symbolic images that could be seen from space. In Spain (pictured above), citizens created a maze in the form of a young girl's face who is afraid the Delta del Ebro will be destroyed by climate change. Meanwhile, in New Mexico, a thousand Girl Scouts and residents holding blue tarps formed a human "flash flood" in the dry remains of the Santa Fe River bed to show what it could look like if water still flowed there. Images from Los Angeles, Manhattan, the Dominican Republic, Mexico and Canada have also come in, with more expected from New Delhi, Egypt, Cancun and elsewhere by the end of the week. Even celebrities, such as Radiohead's Thom Yorke are getting involved. Yorke is trying to organize 2,000 people in Brighton, England to make a huge human "King Cnut type image." (King Cnut being the Norse king who haplessly tried to control the waves.) According to environmentalist Bill McKibben of 350.org, the group that organized the event:
McKibben also addressed pragmatists, who may see this action as merely a distraction from work that will actually prevent climate change:
This article originally appeared on Waging Nonviolence. |
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