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Alex Lawton: Who Invented Littering?

Who Invented Littering? is an investigation and visual meditation into the overwhelming amount of misinformation surrounding climate change. We live in a nation with freedom of the press, which of course has many benefits, but also allows for the legality of lying and deception. It often feels paralyzing to confront the depth of deception and wrongdoing in both our history and present. This piece explores the overwhelming experience of trying to comprehend the complexities of climate change and this pandemic. It is my attempt to actively practice ways of living within a circular economy by subverting our cultural tendency to constantly purchase single-use products. True recycling involves valuing what you have in front of you enough to reuse and reinterpret a new and better reality with the same materials. By observing drastically different visual works transform on the same piece of paper, this piece is intended to be a meditation on the multivalence of a given entity.

Yacob Arroyo: If you love something, let it sink. If it floats, we were never wrong.

In a mere 100 years after oil was found in this region, millions upon millions of years of swamp formation and sediment build-up have been reversed by the actions of humanity. With this reversal comes the loss of several long-standing communities in the state, along with their homes, languages, traditions, and culture. Using the tools of media and advertisements to grab people’s attention, I have created a series of promotional materials for an imaginary soda brand, Louisiana’s Best, whose goal is to inform consumers about what parts of Louisiana are being lost, and how quickly we are losing them.

Andrew Mahaffe: Celebrating Death on the Champion’s Podium

Celebrating Death on the Champions Podium is a series of glass and wood sculptures that function as trophies. They are first, second, and third place participation trophies that harken back to my days in child sports where everyone would be rewarded for contributing to the team’s success. In this case, however, the success we are “celebrating” is the furthering of the destruction of our environment.

Katy Perrault: What are we thinking?

This project explores environmental destruction through the creation of confrontational and ironic posters. Specifically, these images address issues applicable to coastal Louisiana: oil drilling, water-related problems, and corporate power. I hope to point to some of the flaws in the ways these issues have been approached and to incite an examination of the viewer’s internalized mentality about them.

C. Tweedie: ekphrastic fragments

ekphrastic fragments is a triptych of cryptic inscriptions written in response to the art of our altered environment, letters linked to tangible climate waver but exploring the unsavory personal result, the cosmic or internal resistance to a resistance ethic: the fear of action buried in embossed scribbles and obscured by the volume and amplitude of Corporate News Media.

Tess Stroh: Measuring an Era

An hourglass is used to measure the passage of time. Its presence connotes the loss of time or the culmination of a specific event. Placing this piece in the context of environmental degradation is eerily apt. Even though our current isolation seems to slow time, the crisis at hand is a stark reminder that time waits for no one. We have no excuse to postpone action against the global threats we all face.

William Sockness: Packaged For Your Convenience

Packaged For Your Convenience is a series of photographs exploring our unsustainable dependence on plastic. Through the creation of highly textured and detailed images, I wanted to visually probe our pervasive use of plastic. My work and research originally set out to highlight the outlandish price of bottled water and its intersection with poverty and access to clean tap water. Because tap water costs less than a cent per gallon out of the tap, I was shocked to learn that the production of disposable plastic bottles was nearly just as cheap, costing pennies per container. As I began to photograph some of the plastics that litter our everyday environment, I became more focused on the subconscious burden of plastic as a means of encasing nearly all consumer products, wrapping everything from fruit to phone chargers in layers of unnecessary plastic. The companies producing these products have managed to shift the psychological burden of recycling and blame onto the consumer, rather than the people that are actually perpetuating these harmful practices. Until we hold these corporations accountable, rather than individual consumers, nothing will change. In an era increasingly defined by climate change and subsequent displacement, the price we pay as a nation is too great, both financially and environmentally. A lack of action and accountability is what corporations continue to bank on, allowing for the continued denial of their power and ability to change our relationship with plastic.

Sidney Astl: How to Be a Homemaker When You Have No Body

How to Be a Homemaker When You Have No Body uses disorienting video overlays and contradictory statements to create an enduring anxiety that feels like an unavoidable result of the digital age. This video was specifically made as a reflection on notions of home and space during the COVID-19 pandemic. As our physical space has become more confined, the way we experience space is increasingly situated in the intangible and less grounded by connections to the earth. This physical connection to our material surroundings seems to be constantly at odds with the immaterial. How to Be a Homemaker When You Have No Body encourages the audience to confront their relationship to media, memory, and storage while addressing the ways that our reliance on the seemingly immaterial can haunt and ostracize us from our art, our planet, and ourselves.

Anya Mukundan

The series Human-Oyster Mutualism presents a hand-painted depiction of the ecosystem services that oysters provide. Mapping the Cost of Land Lost portrays a set of movable wooden letters with price tags as a data-based representation of land loss and gain in Louisiana.

Amelia Wiygul: The Trouble with Wilderness

This piece references the 1995 essay of the same title by William Cronon: The Trouble with Wilderness. In the essay, Cronon deconstructs the concept of some wild, pristine Garden of Eden that exists separately from humankind. In reality, every inch of the earth has been shaped or affected by human civilization, and even in industrialized life we remain fundamentally connected to nature.