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    LigoranoReese

    The Temper, 2015

    Photograph printed on Moab Entrada Rag 290 with archival inks

    Edition of 5 + 2AP

    44 x 40 inches unframed
    48 x 43 inches framed

    image description
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    LigoranoReese

    Lightness Next to Fire, 2015

    Photograph printed on Moab Entrada Rag 290 with archival inks

    Edition of 5 + 2AP

    44 x 40 inches unframed
    48 x 43 inches framed

    image description
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    LigoranoReese

    To Feed the Clouds, 2015

    Photograph printed on Moab Entrada Rag 290 with archival inks

    Edition of 5 + 2AP

    44 x 40 inches unframed
    48 x 43 inches framed

    image description
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    LigoranoReese

    Video of the public art installation Dawn of the Anthropocene, 2014

    MORE about this artwork

    On the morning of September 21, 2014, LigoranoReese installed a 3,000-pound ice sculpture of the words THE FUTURE at the intersection of Broadway and 23rd Streets at Flat Iron North Plaza in New York City. This public art work coincided with the U.N. Climate Summit and the People's Climate March--underscoring the necessity for immediate action to confront global warming.  The ice sculpture, which originally measured 21 feet wide and 5 feet tall, eventually melted away. During this process, LigoranoReese photographed and filmed the installation’s disappearance, posting it on the internet in real-time. The event combined many forms: sculpture, installation, performance, and internet media event.  Dawn of the Anthropocene was so named to describe the effect of humanity on the Earth’s systems. The term comes from Nobel prize scientist Paul Crutzen.  In his and other scientists’ view, humanity has entered an age when the power and impact of humans is as great, if not greater, than nature’s.

    ligoranoreese-dawn-of-the-anthropocene-video-2014
  • INQUIRE

    LigoranoReese

    Photograph of the public art installation Dawn of the Anthropocene, 2014

    MORE about this artwork

    On the morning of September 21, 2014, LigoranoReese installed a 3,000-pound ice sculpture of the words THE FUTURE at the intersection of Broadway and 23rd Streets at Flat Iron North Plaza in New York City. This public art work coincided with the U.N. Climate Summit and the People's Climate March--underscoring the necessity for immediate action to confront global warming.  The ice sculpture, which originally measured 21 feet wide and 5 feet tall, eventually melted away. During this process, LigoranoReese photographed and filmed the installation’s disappearance, posting it on the internet in real-time. The event combined many forms: sculpture, installation, performance, and internet media event.  Dawn of the Anthropocene was so named to describe the effect of humanity on the Earth’s systems. The term comes from Nobel prize scientist Paul Crutzen.  In his and other scientists’ view, humanity has entered an age when the power and impact of humans is as great, if not greater, than nature’s.

    image description
  • INQUIRE

    LigoranoReese

    Photograph of the public art installation Dawn of the Anthropocene, 2014

    MORE about this artwork

    On the morning of September 21, 2014, LigoranoReese installed a 3,000-pound ice sculpture of the words "The Future" at the intersection of Broadway and 23rd Streets at Flat Iron North Plazain New York City. This public art work coincided with the U.N.Climate Summit and the People's Climate March--underscoring the necessity for immediate action to confront global warming.  The ice sculpture, which originally measured 21 feet wide and 5 feet tall, eventually melted away. During this process, LigoranoReese photographed and film the installation’s disappearance, posting it on the internet in real-time. The event combined many forms: sculpture, installation, performance, and internet media event.  Dawn of the Anthropocene was so named to describe the effect of humanity on the Earth’s systems. The term comes from Nobel prize scientist Paul Crutzen.  In his and other scientists’ view, humanity has entered an age when the power and impact of humans is as great, if not greater, than nature’s.

    image description
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