Cajf 50th Anniversary Flashback: Reporting the Worlds Biggest Environmental Stories
Arts Cult nike dunk ureAvant-garde past and presentCorydon IrelandHarvard Staff WriterOctober 20, 20095 min readA Fluxus tour with Alison Know stanley cup lesIn 1960, Alison Knowles was a young artist in beat-era Manhattan. She took long walks up Canal Street, which in those days was lined with job lots, barrels of random overproduction from factories. For a dollar or less, you could buy handfuls of set screws, ribbons, glasses frames, and other industrial detritus. You didn t spend any money to make an art object, said Knowles, a Radcliffe Fellow this fall. You went along Canal Street and put something together. She and her friends were part of Fluxus, an anti-art art group that had begun at the New School for Social Research. It still exists. The idea was that chance mattered in expression, and that traditional art had drawn too hard a line betw ugg mini een itself and real life.Fluxus became a basis for American performance art, such as it is, Knowles told an Oct. 19 audience at the Radcliffe Gymnasium Laku Marwa Elshakry named Carnegie Scholar
This story is part o adidas sambarose f Covering Climate Now, a global journalism collaboration strengthening coverage of the climate story.聽The Earth s climate has always been a work in progress. In the 4.5 billion years the planet has been spinning around the sun, ice ages have come and gone, interrupted by epochs of intense heat. The highest mountain range in Texas was once an underwater reef. Camels wandered in evergreen forests in the Arctic. Then a few million years later, 400 feet of ice formed over what is now New York City. But amid this geologic mayhem, humans have gotten lucky. For the past 10,000 years, virtually the entire stretch of human civilization, people ha adidas campus 80s ve lived in what scientists call a Goldilocks climate 鈥?not too hot, not adidas campus herren too cold, just right.Now, our luck is running out. The industrialized nations of the world are dumping 34 billion tons or so of carbon into the atmosphere every year, which is roughly 10 times faster than Mother Nature ever did on her own, even during past ma |