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Emily Pilloton

MASSIVE CHANGE Exhibition in Chicago

by , 10/14/06
filed under: Green Design Events

Earth Simulator
Earth Simulator. JAMSTEC/ Earth Simulator Center

Massive Change, the recently-debuted global design exhibition at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago, is less a display of interesting projects as it is a call to action. Upon entering the museum lobby, oversized text reads, “Congratulations. You have just joined the Massive Change project…You are now part of an international network exploring the future of global design.” Open through December 31, the exhibition looks at new technologies and the potential for design to effect change on a global scale, asking visitors to be aware and, more importantly, to be a part of the change.

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11 Responses to “MASSIVE CHANGE Exhibition in Chicago”

  1. mikel mikel says:

    nice one!!!

    id like to go, but a bit far for me

    regards

  2. Featherless chicken? Not for me thanks… I rather go without. The rest of the article is fantastic.

  3. mykel mykel says:

    I think I’ll go. Although, I’m not too keen on the featherless chicken.

  4. I saw this exhibit in Vancouver. It is optomistic to a fault! But I like that. It has been a “call to action” for me and I think if you can see it you should see it.

  5. Alice Williams Alice Williams says:

    I`m sure Adi Nes, knows nothing about saving money and raising chickens. The cost of protection, ie. climate insects ect .,would be cost prohibitive on a scale of any size, with ” BALD” chickens. The rest of the article, WONDERFUL!!!

  6. frances frances says:

    I’m sure those chickens won’t be seeing the light of day; that they’re intended for factory farming, where climate can be controlled. No feathers, no lice, too….so less insecticide needed?

  7. chicago chicago says:

    I felt good about this post. It confirmed for me some of the things I’ve been thinking about.

  8. chicagoan chicagoan says:

    I was present during the set up for Massive Change. With all the garbage produced so far from that show, there was absolutely NO concerns about recycling any of it from Bruce Mau or the Vancouver Art Gallery or the MCA curators or director. I hope someone investigates where all that NON-recyclable vinyl lettering and imagery that is plastered all over the museum goes when the show is done. More than likely it goes straight into a landfill where it will never break down because it’s NOT “green”. Don’t even get me started on the amount of wood, plexi and drywall that will go straight into a dumpster. Luckily there are local artists around that sometimes intercept these perfectly good materials before they end up in a landfill.

  9. [...] Future.” Panel members and speakers included Natalie Jeremijenko (artist and engineer), Bruce Mau (the man behind the Massive Change exhibition), Jennifer Siegal (our favorite prefab pioneer), and [...]

  10. [...] the Massive Change project and exhibition, the Institute without Boundaries embarks on their second multi-year [...]

  11. I’m going to Chicago for the USGBC Greenbuild conference, and nowhere in the information was thsi included as a destintion in Chicago. I’m going to go see it, and then I’ll know if the new paradigms for living sustainably are already being explored. The drinking straw is genial, the chicken…well that’s already been said! No wonder I don’t eat chicken!

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