Grimes, Bon Iver, and Other Musicians Are Creating Immersive Art Experiences to Draw Attention to the Climate Crisis
The installations will appear in a pop-up exhibition in Brooklyn.
Grimes. Courtesy of Undercurrent.
Next month, Grimes, Bon Iver, The 1975, and other musicians will try their hands at art in the name of raising awareness around the climate crisis. Each act will lend their vision to a separate immersive multimedia experience for a pop-up exhibition opening September 9 in Brooklyn. “Undercurrent,” as the event is called, is the debut outing of a new event company of the same name.
Each of the event’s 11 installations will be developed in collaboration with one of three environmentally-focused nonprofits: Kiss the Ground, Ocean Conservancy, and Global Forest Generation.
Grimes, 1975, Khruangbin, Bon Iver create art for climate change awareness exhibit
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Miguel, Bon Iver, Jorja Smith Helped Craft Installations for New Music and Art Platform, Undercurrent
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Bon Iver, Miguel, Jorja Smith Join Interactive Platform Undercurrent
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04/24/2021
Earlier this week, the Canadian Football League announced shifted season plans, changing its planned start from June 10 to August 5 due to continued challenges with the current “critical” stage of the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada. It had been widely anticipated that the CFL wasn’t actually going to be able to pull off a June 10 start, but what exactly a season shift would look like was very much up for debate, especially with the league having ongoing talks with the new XFL ownership group (even if claims of cancelled 2021 and 2022 CFL seasons and a full CFL-XFL merger are still very premature). So the announcement of an August start date that currently seems at least somewhat possible (although far from assured) was likely good news for a lot of under-contract CFL players trying to plan out what’s ahead for them. The particular timing of this plan was not good for Hamilton Tiger-Cats receiver Jaelon Acklin, though, as he told Steve Milton of