Hero photograph
Too hot to handle at 20° warming? (2022), by Down The Rabbit Hole Collective, multimedia work comprising a framed photograph, a video work, and 3D coccolithophone models under a bell jar on a light table
 
Photo by Pam McKinlay

Life's a gas

Pam McKinlay —

This year's Art+Science exhibition explored ideas about air.

We can last three weeks without food, three to four days without water, but mere minutes without air. Air/breath/wind is the nebulous thing that connects all living beings and in te ao Māori the breath or wind of life is hau. We think of trees and plants as the "lungs of the earth" producing oxygen for us to breathe, but every second breath we take is made in the ocean.

Artists and scientists involved in the project explore a broad range of questions about breathing and air, scaling between human breath and planetary breathing which has changed over time and continues to change. How might our intimate relationship with each breath draw our attention to global atmospheric changes driving climate change? 

Curated by Pam McKinlay from the Dunedin School of Art, this year's exhibition was held at the Dunedin Community Gallery from 30 September to 8 October, and was accompanied by a full programme of free community events.