VISUAL & PERFORMING ARTS | RESEARCH ARTICLE

2016 
1 * Abstract: In his last book, The Aesthetic Dimension (1978), Marcuse argued that a concern for aesthetics is justified when political change is unlikely. But the rela- tion between aesthetics and politics is oblique: "Art cannot change the world, but it can contribute to changing the consciousness … of the men and women who could change the world." (p. 33). Marcuse also linked his critique of capitalism to environmentalism in the early 1970s: "the violation of the Earth is a vital aspect of the counterrevolution." (Ecology and Revolution, in The New Left and the 1960s, Collected Papers 3, 2005, p. 173). This article revisits Marcuse's ideas on aesthet- ics and ecology, and reviews two recent art projects which engage their audiences in ecological issues: The Jetty Project (2014) by Wolfgang Weileder—which used recycled material and community participation to construct a temporary monu- ment within a wider conservation project on the Tyne, N-E England—and Fracking Futures by HeHe (Helen Evans and Heiko Hansen)—which turned the interior of the gallery at FACT, Liverpool, into what appeared to be a fracking site. The aim is not to evaluate the projects, nor to test the efficacy of Marcuse's ideas, more to ask again whether art has a role in a shift of attitude which might contribute to dealing with the political and economic causes of climate change.
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