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Garden for a Changing Climate

Monday, April 23, 2018–Saturday, August 25, 2018
Location:
Gallery 400
400 South Peoria Street, Chicago, IL 60607

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Jenny Kendler is an interdisciplinary artist, environmental activist, naturalist and wild forager who lives in Chicago and elsewhere. She is currently the first Artist-in-Residence with Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC), and stewards the non-profit artist residency ACRE, as Vice President of the Board. Kendler’s work has been exhibited nationally and internationally at museums and biennials. She holds a BFA from the Maryland Institute College of Art and an MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago

Created by artist Jenny Kendler, Garden for a Changing Climate is a community-driven participatory public art project that uses a traveling garden of local plants to give Chicagoans a dynamic and tangible experience of the central effects of climate change. As our climate warms, seasons and ecozones will shift. The push-able and pull-able, wheeled Garden for a Changing Climate planters demonstrate these changes in accelerated fashion. Through this moving garden, Chicago residents can envision the otherwise largely invisible, slow, and dispersed threat of climate change, and understand how a shifting climate will change our urban environment. Community-based organizations will lead how the Garden project draws participants into an understanding of how these changes will affect them directly.

A recent paper, published in the science journal Nature, suggests that climate zones (and their corresponding ecosystems) are moving at the approximate rate of 3.8 feet every day. The rate will vary widely for different species, but the principle remains the same—that in order to survive the locked-in warming predicted in our future, organisms, including plants, must move towards the poles.

Filled with diverse Midwestern plants and constructed with reclaimed materials, the fleet of planters are the center of community-based activities, walks, and conversations considering the coming climate-related effects on Chicago. Planned in collaboration with Chicago community-based organizations public Garden for a Changing Climate walks and events will take place from April to September 2018 on UIC’s campus and in featured Chicago neighborhoods.

At its heart Garden for a Changing Climate asks participants to consider our relationship to a changing climate and asks: What does climate change mean to the lives we live here in our city? How will the lives of humans, plants, animals, insects, and other species change or be altered? What unexpected opportunities to restructure a more just world may be provided with these changes? What are we hopeful about in re-shaping our futures? Garden for a Changing Climate aims to encourage citizen science and bring new sense-based awareness to the often times imperceptible issue of climate change. Reconnecting our sensitivities with nature’s shifts in time and space can help us understand the new paths being made in this quickly changing world—and give us a compass by which to chart our own way forward, together.