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Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts

Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts

Can the Seas Survive Us?

By (author) Tania Moore
By (author) John Kenneth Paranada

£25.00

Publishing 10th Mar 2025
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    • In depth analysis of humanity’s relationship to the sea through art, poetry and music
    • Addresses major issues regarding the environment and humanity’s response to the dangers it faces
    • Offers unique insight and helps readers find their own answers to the most important questions they have in their lives right now
    • Features art from all over the world
    • The book will accompany a season of related exhibitions at the Sainsbury Centre, University of East Anglia, Norwich, Norfolk: Ecological Frontiers, 15 March–3 August, 2025; Yuki Kihara: Paradise Camp, 15 March–3 August, 2025; Sea Inside, 7 June–21 September, 2025
    Full Description

    Addressing one of the urgent issues of climate crisis and environmental pollution, this book explores our relationship to the sea: how we live alongside it, our bodily relationship to it, its role in the creation of a connected, global society and, perhaps most critically, the threat we pose to it.

    Through a broad selection of works by contemporary international artists, Can the Seas Survive Us? responds to the urgent need to resuscitate our seas. While the oceanic environment is essential to all life, its vulnerability to human action is highlighted by an ever-increasing loss of biodiversity. This book prompts the reader to imagine a future in which collective human behaviour can mitigate the effects of climate change. As ocean temperatures reach record highs, it is clear that time is not on our side. This ambitious project aspires to accelerate climate awareness and deliver the critical climate action we urgently need.

    About the Author

    John Kenneth Paranada serves as the Curator of Art and Climate Change at the Sainsbury Centre, funded by the John Ellerman Foundation, and is a researcher at the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research, UEA. His interdisciplinary expertise spans museum studies, curatorial studies, art history, community engagement, climate communication and energy management. In 2023, he curated ‘Sediment Spirit’ and co-edited the publication Planet For Our Future. Specialising in international contemporary art, sustainability and planetary ecology, Ken focuses on curating art and culture to accelerate climate awareness and action. He is affiliated with international organisations such as the International Council of Museums, the Committee for Museums and Collections of Modern Art and the Association of Art Museum Curators, amongst others. Tania Moore is head of exhibitions at the Sainsbury Centre. Tania was exhibition curator for the ‘What is Truth?’ season at the Sainsbury Centre. Publications include What Is Truth? (Sainsbury Centre, 2024), and Rhythm and Geometry: Constructivist Art in Britain Since 1951 (Sainsbury Centre, 2021). She has contributed chapters on post-war and contemporary sculpture to publications including Magdalene Odundo: The Journey of Things (InOther Words, 2019), Elisabeth Frink: Humans and Other Animals (Sainsbury Centre, 2018) and Becoming Henry Moore (Henry Moore Foundation, 2017). In 2019, she received the New Collecting Award from the Art Fund to acquire sculptors’ drawings by contemporary women and non-binary artists for the Sainsbury Centre collection.

    Specifications
    Publisher
    Kulturalis
    ISBN
    9781836360049
    Publish date
    10th Mar 2025
    Binding
    Paperback / softback
    Territory
    World
    Size
    245 mm x 180 mm
    Pages
    128 Pages
    Illustrations
    60 color
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