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Curating as an Act of Care - Announcements

Terreform ONE wins National Endowment for the Arts grant - Announcements

Terreform ONE’s recent initiative, the Fab Tree Hab, has been honored with a Grants for Arts Projects award from the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA), recognizing its revolutionary approach to architectural design.

Naiyi Wang appointed co-curator of inaugural edition - Announcements

Curator and researcher Naiyi Wang joins Shaoqiang Wang (Director of GDMoA), Vicky Richardson, Stanley Wong, and Degeng Li, as co-curator of the upcoming Guangzhou Design Triennial.

A New View in Camden tackles illegal dumping through art

WHYY By Mechan 11: The Collector was installed in North Camden s Cramer Hill Neighborhood. The heart for the 15-foot-tall robot was designed by a Camden high school student and then fabricated by Tyler Fuqua Creations. (Emma Lee/WHYY) The City of Camden spends more than $4 million a year cleaning up after illegal dumpers. Some are so bold, they’ve carved out specific dumping grounds. There’s a place where mountains of old Christmas trees pile up. Other places have tons of kitchen and bathroom appliances or accumulate debris from housing construction and other garbage sources. Camdenites have been fed up for a while. They see it as a combination of greed from the haulers that send their trash there and a form of urban insult.

Earth Day 2021: N J city fights illegal dumping with epic recycled outdoor art display

Earth Day 2021: N.J. city fights illegal dumping with epic recycled outdoor art display. Updated 6:56 AM; A series of environmentally-conscious public art displays officially open Thursday on Camden, timed to coincide with Earth Day 2021. Instillations include a giant black cat made of recycled car hoods, a turntable created with plastic bottles and face masks and a 17-foot-tall robot with a heart that beats for his planet. Those and more are available to peruse throughout various Camden neighborhoods starting today after a year-long delay due to COVID-19. The artwork, which is made from recycled materials, looks to spotlight the issue of illegal dumping. It’s a problem that costs taxpayers in the Camden County municipality more than $4 million a year, according to the city.

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