Festive/ceremonial costume design can be the jumping off point for much new exploration in fashion
It’s a transhistorical feature of communal celebrations, new versions of which will emerge as our economy shifts to post-industrial, democratic forms of production, esp agriculture
2) Architecture
“Petro-capitalist modernism” values only profit maximization & is entirely reliant on artificially cheap energy for its design & construction. The results are 👎
Natural materials & skilled human labor can surpass it for beauty, interest, & functionality w/ ease
3) Ceramics
These wild crafted pieces by Pascal Baudar show what future/primitive ceramic art could look like
All of the materials are foraged & unprocessed, all of the glazes are natural, & all of the firing is done in earthen kilns
The results are gorgeous & functional
4) Embroidery
Since the invention of needle & thread humans have made embroidered fabric art
But there is still plenty of room to innovate, provoke, & delight
Natural dyes, novel surfaces, narratives, & the scavenged wastes of fast fashion all offer promising new directions
5) Facade decoration
It would be an impractical waste to simply knock down all the awful buildings constructed under petro-capitalism. But a banal building can become surprisingly beautiful w/ a decorated facade
So we must task artists with remaking them, one facade at a time
6) Woodworking
There will simply never be an end to the potential for creativity with wood, which would be a core product of eco-socialist agroforestry
Some contemporary artists are showing that one of our warmest, most sustainable materials still has so much to offer
7) Woven sculpture
Weaving w/ wheat goes back to at least Ancient Egypt
But woven art needn’t be limited to wheat: countless natural materials offer the opportunity to contrast organic & geometric patterns
Imagine a world of interior decor based on seasonal weaving of plants
8) Floral Design
In an ecosocialist society, flowers would be among the most common luxuries—they are a necessary byproduct of post-fossil fuel agriculture. Fashioning them into ambitious works of art would be an obvious use for an abundant & already gorgeous resource
9) Textile weaving
Weaving, knitting, & crochet would undoubtedly experience a renaissance once sweatshop production, plastic textiles, & globalized supply chains became a thing of the past
Local animal & plant fibers, natural dyes, & coop production could take their place
10) Willow sculpture
Willow is a very fast growing tree that can be easily coppiced to produce long, pliable strands readily manipulated into all kinds of shapes
Even while willow is alive, it can be used as a functional topiary to produce living sculptures that grow & evolve
11) Basketry
In a world w/o plastic bags, vessels for carrying things will get renewed interest, both for their utility & their artistry
Instead of a world littered w/ plastic garbage, we can have a world where the craftsmanship & artistry of baskets beautifies everyday life
12) Kinetic sculpture
This “strandbeest” by Theo Jansen is a 42’ long wind-powered kinetic sculpture that runs along the beach indefinitely
Imagine a world in which one might encounter a kinetic sculpture like this anytime one went out for walk. It would be marvelously strange
Contemporary art is largely awful. Why? Because art is an expression of a society’s values & material culture. The values of petro-capitalism are profit maximization & nothing else. That vapidity is reflected in the meaningless of our art
It doesn’t have to be this way
Ecosocialism is the path out of this dystopia. We can live in a future that values humanity & our ecosystem above all else, and those values will produce art that deeply matters in the lives of normal people, not plutocrats
That is the democratic, sustainable art we deserve
The backstory is a real “necessity is the mother of invention” thing: bred in communist Hungary for use on collective farms that often lacked fungicides, herbicides, refrigeration, or anti-sprouting treatments 🧵
Sarpo Mira is perhaps the most naturally blight resistant potato in existence. It also produces an unusually large amount of foliage, shading out weeds in the process. And the yields are massive in part b/c it is “indeterminate”: it’ll keep growing until it’s killed by frost
The large, deep root system it develops means the plant requires less irrigation & is less susceptible to drought. And the potatoes themselves are unusually high in dry matter, making them excellent keepers. Last but not least, it has lovely pink/purple flowers
Just learned about the trompe: a simple device w/ no moving parts that turns the movement of water into compressed air
Every stream on Earth can yield an unlimited supply of free compressed air & we’ve known how to do this since the 17th Century
Legit makes me feel insane
Compressed air has many uses, but the most notable is that it’s a battery in gas form. When you release it, it can drive a turbine, which can either yield mechanical or electrical energy
We could easily enjoy many of the benefits of industrialism w/o killing our ecosystem
Instead we argue about whether we should replace one doomsday technology w/ another
If we’re willing to live w/ industrialism lite & deploy appropriate technologies, we don’t need to turn half the world into sacrifice zones & the other half into a plastic & concrete hellscape
If tools became more expensive— reflecting the negative externalities created by their production—it would reduce people’s ability to amass them
But paired w/ tool libraries, access to tools would dramatically increase, not decrease. This would make us richer, not poorer
Not only would it increase your personal access to tools, it would increase everyone’s. And since you share the world w/ others, you would benefit from that as well: your neighbors would make more repairs, complete more projects, & there’d be fewer negative externalities
It’s almost impossible to talk about food & climate change w/o wading into the morass of culture war bullshit
But at the end of the day, the only sane take is this: we should eat whatever mix of foods allows us to survive on this planet indefinitely nature.com/articles/s4155…
Under current conditions, that means a lot less meat. Like everything else in our civilization, animal agriculture is propped up by artificially cheap energy, which is killing us. The moral abomination of factory farming is essentially the process of turning gasoline into protein
Raising animals for food requires a lot of inputs: labor, food, water, medicine, infrastructure, etc. Orders of magnitude more than plants
They are also much more valuable alive than dead: they produce milk, eggs, labor, fiber, manure, offspring, & so on
The normal operation of nuclear power plants is extremely harmful to human life & the environment
Thermal discharge destroys aquatic life & creates vast dead zones. Radioactive discharge damages the DNA of animals & humans. Childhood cancer rates soar around nuclear plants
That’s for “normal operations,” but accidents are themselves part of the normal operation of any human system. We should not pretend nuclear accidents can be prevented
And nuclear power plant accidents are horrific beyond words. They represent a totally unacceptable risk to life
Eco-modernists would have you believe that only irrational fear mongers fail to see the viability of nuclear power as a solution to climate change
That is wildly, laughably incorrect. In addition to the deadly harms created by radioactivity, they are not carbon free