Grantee tags climate crisis

Arterial Forest
Tali Weinberg
Year Grant Awarded: 2023
Silhouettes of endangered tree species are portrayed upside-down to resemble lungs, arteries, and roots—all parts of usually invisible, life-enabling circulatory systems. Hand-woven from cotton and plastic, they embody connections between extraction, illness, species loss, and plastic proliferation. Read More
- Email: tali.weinberg@gmail.com
- Website: https://www.taliweinberg.com/

The Planet Earth Farewell Concert
Oppenheim, Jonas
Year Grant Awarded: 2023
"The Planet Earth Farewell Concert" is a climate-crisis show that combines political satire, immersive theater, cabaret, and variety, to take a multifaceted, absurdist look at where we’re at, where we’re going, and what we can do. Read More

Losing Winter
Cazabon, Lynn
Year Grant Awarded: 2022
Losing Winter is a site-specific, participatory artwork and archive of memories and emotions about winter, revealing the personal and cultural ties we have to the season and providing a window onto what we are collectively losing due to climate change impacts on weather patterns. Read More
- Email: hermithrush@gmail.com
- Website: https://www.losingwinter.net/

Communicating the Climate Crisis: Posters envisioning a better world for the next generations
Shenefield, Barbara
Year Grant Awarded: 2022
Engaging the youthful viewer in a vision of a better world and a better future that we can create: what does that future look like? Let’s dream big and beautiful. Read More

Spring 2022 issue of ZEKE Magazine features sustainable solutions to the climate crisis
Reportage International (DBA Social Documentary Network)
Year Grant Awarded: 2022
The Spring 2022 print and digital issue of “ZEKE: The Magazine of Global Documentary” focuses on sustainable solutions to the climate crisis with photographs by Kiliii Yuyan, Giacomo d'Orlando, and Sarah Fretwell, and others. Read More

Weather Report
Harrison, Susan Rowe
Year Grant Awarded: 2022
Weather Report is a pictorial cycle on the gallery walls that explores how humans are destroying the living world in a gothic landscape where plants that once flourished progressively fade or thrive depending on how you move through the room. It is neither a hopeful future nor a catastrophic one. Read More
- Email: susan@lunule.com
- Website: www.lunule.com