The latest show at England's Baltic sets a whole new bar for exhibiting art in a climate crisis
Briefly

"There are indigenous cultures in which there aren't different words for nature and culture," says the exhibition's curator Irene Aristizabal. "The land, the person, the nature around it, they are not separated... this exhibition approaches the world as a "pluriverse", where many worlds exist. They don't try and cancel each other, they support each other. It's a unity or a web of interconnectedness."
"These deities are shaped by queer resistance and offer rambunctious opposition to centuries of colonial displacement and environmental degradation."
Read at The Art Newspaper - International art news and events
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