EcoArtTech events for Off The Grid

Mar 27, 2008 - Mar 29, 2008
Neuberger Museum of Art

Purchase College, SUNY | Purchase, NY 10277
http://www.neuberger.org

"Environmental Risk Assessment Rover - AT," EcoArtTech: Christine Nadir and Cary Peppermint

"Environmental Risk Assessment Rover - AT," EcoArtTech: Christine Nadir and Cary Peppermint. for Off The Grid at the Neuberger Museum of Art, Purchase, NY. (Projection Image)

"Environmental Risk Assessment Rover - AT," EcoArtTech: Christine Nadir and Cary Peppermint

"Environmental Risk Assessment Rover - AT," EcoArtTech: Christine Nadir and Cary Peppermint . for Off The Grid at the Neuberger Museum of Art, Purchase, NY. (Mobile Station)

Thursday, March 27
Friday, March 28
Saturday, March 29
Meet at the Neuberger Museum of Art at 7pm

Join EcoArtTech (Christine Nadir and Cary Peppermint) for three evenings of performances with the Environmental Risk Assessment Rover–AT (ERAR–AT), a mobile, solar-powered, networked video installation that will accumulate and aggregate the environmental threats and risks that Purchase residents face everyday.

What kind of environmental risks does Purchase face? How far is the closest superfund site or nuclear power plant or agribusiness? How do the 148 industrial chemicals already in every American human body interact with the synthetic hormones and antibiotics in the dairy products we eat? How many chemicals are in human breast milk? How do the chemicals in your toothpaste interact with the pesticides on your food? Why has modernity, which was supposed to create a sense of security, produced more anxiety and threats than ever? Can scientific data and research help us understand the “riskiness” of contemporary life?

ERAR-AT performs the difficulty of perceiving, evaluating, and understanding risk scenarios and presents an assessment of its given locale by producing a unique fourteen-tiered threat level embedded live within video projections onto local natural and architectural surfaces.

“Sooner rather than later, one comes up against the law that so long as risks are not recognized scientifically, they do not exist--at least not legally, medically, technologically, or socially, and they are thus not prevented, treated or compensated for. No amount of collective moaning can change this, only science. Scientific judgment's monopoly on truth therefore forces the victims themselves to make use of all the methods and means of scientific analysis in order to succeed with their claims.”
—German risk theorist Ulrich Beck