Jessie Boylan is a PhD candidate at RMIT's School of Art. She has work in the upcoming Castlemaine State Festival called The Smallest Measure. Her thesis and upcoming art instillation has taken her out to the wilds of a remote outpost at the edge of Tasmania... to a place called Cape Grim where there is a science lab that tests the air coming in off the ocean there. Without land or human habitation for hundreds of kilometres, the air blowing in off the ocean to cape grim is considered the best air in the world to get base measurements of our atmosphere, including carbon and other green house gasses. This data is vital in our understanding of global warming. How does an artist depict the science of climate change? Listen to this episode to find out.
See Saltgrasspodcast.com for more information.
S2 E25 Dja Dja Wurring Radio Uncle Rick
S2 E24 Regenerative Agriculture
S2 E23 Conscious Clothing
S2 E22 Neighbourhood Houses and Climate
S2 E21 What is Z-NET?
S2 E20 The environmental cost of our digital world with Maikel Linke
S2 E19 Cam Walker and Friends of the Earth (FoE)
S2 E18 Deep Ecology and Non Violent Direct Action
S2 E17 Adani Coal Mine and its protesters
S2 E16 Natural Funerals
S2 E15 Deb Taylor - The Long Ride
S2 E14 In the Beginning - Nappies
S2 E13 Food Security - Local Food and Farmers Markets
S2 E12 Peter Yates and Deep Adaptation
S2 E11 Author Illustrators: Trace Balla and J M Rodier... and the virus v the environment (update)
S2 E10 Coronavirus and Human Signs
S2 E9 Upwelling - Art and Climate Change
S2 E8 Coping with Climate Change
S2 E7 When the River Runs Dry
S2 E6 Protest Part 2
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