Ep 5: Art as Witness to Climate Crimes

Climate & Environment · ~50 min · Season 1

In Michigan, Bonnie Peterson embroiders climate data onto silk. In Minneapolis, Shug Munich gathers strangers to make a "crazy quilt" from surgical bandages and childhood dish towels. Both are working with their hands to witness something most of us struggle to look at directly: what's happening to our climate.

This isn't new. Artists have always been among the first to witness what the rest of us struggle to look at. But the story of environmental art in the developed world is also the story of what richer nations forgot, or never wanted to learn. Before Western environmentalism had a name, Indigenous peoples across what's now called North America had been practicing environmental stewardship for millennia.

"I'm Bonnie Peterson and I am in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan near the south shore of Lake Superior... Lake Superior is one of the biggest surface areas of any lake in the globe. So people are a little concerned about it, which is nice. And I'm making climate graphs with embroidery."

Bonnie Peterson, Climate Data Embroiderer
Bonnie Peterson, Turning Green (detail), 2013. Embroidered climate data.
Bonnie Peterson, Turning Green (detail), 2013. Appliqué, hand and free motion embroidery on silk, velvet, brocade. Showing near-surface air temperature for the Greenland Ice Sheet from 1850–2000.

Bonnie's work transforms scientific data into objects that can be held, contemplated, and passed down. She cold-emails glaciologists and fire scientists, asking them to explain their research until she understands it, then spends months or years translating that data into embroidery on silk.

"Each artist is being asked to facilitate some sort of project that responds to climate collapse and hopefully engages community into building some climate resistance... How are we engaging in community so that you're not holding this alone?"

Shug Munich, Textile Artist & Community Facilitator

Shug Munich's project, "Devotion Is Never a Waste: Quilting Amidst Collapse," invites people to bring fabric that would otherwise be thrown away and transform it into a crazy quilt. The materials people bring carry stories: owl-print pillowcases from a grandmother's house, dish towels from a childhood cabin, post top-surgery bandages.

Quilting Amidst Collapse community quilt by Shug Munich
Shug Munich, Quilting Amidst Collapse community quilt. Featuring hearts, teardrops, and mixed fabrics brought by participants.

Climate grief is isolating. The scale of the problem makes individual action feel pointless. That's exactly where community craft becomes essential.

"The things that I've made, historically, have had a kind of dually dystopian and utopian sort of vision... dystopian in the sense that they're more or less 100 percent constructed from the refuse of society."

Paul Yore, Australian Artist

Bonnie is developing contingency plans to keep accessing climate data by switching to European databases like Copernicus because her own government might erase the information. A fiber artist in Michigan, tracking which universities are picking up data collection as federal agencies are defunded.

Down in a library basement, Shug leads people through the slow work of cutting and stitching while the world walks by overhead. People peeking through the basement windows asked the librarian: "What's going on? People are smiling. How do I do that? I want to sew."

This is what artists have always done. They find the basement. They find the margins. And they make something there that outlasts the empires walking overhead.

They find the margins. And they make something there that outlasts the empires walking overhead.

Episode Timeline

00:00
Cold Open · Bonnie Peterson introduces herself and Lake Superior
02:00
Introduction · Ian on artists as first witnesses
05:00
Indigenous Environmental Stewardship · Before Western environmentalism had a name
08:00
Bonnie's Process · Cold-emailing glaciologists, translating data to silk
15:00
Fire Science Piece · Complex relationships between drought, temperature, and wildfire
20:00
Shug Munich · Quilting Amidst Collapse, community quilting in a library basement
28:00
The Materials People Bring · Owl-print pillowcases, dish towels, post top-surgery bandages
33:00
Paul Yore · Dystopian and utopian visions from the refuse of society
38:00
Data Under Attack · Contingency plans, European databases, defunded agencies
43:00
Library Basement · People smiling through the windows
48:00
Closing · Next episode: Memory, Grief, and the Politics of Remembering
Host Ian Danger Capstick Editor Shawn Dearn Production Secret Agents