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Glaciers are keystones of life. They serve as freshwater reservoirs, especially in dry periods, as habitats for specialized animal and plant species that are adapted to extreme conditions, as climate regulators thanks to their reflective surface (Alberdo effect) and much more.
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According to the NASA the Antarctica is losing 150 billion tons of ice every year. Greenland is losing about 270 billion tons per year. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) assume that the arctic polar ice will have completely disappeared in the summer of 2040.
As a result, ice is becoming an increasingly valuable resource in nature in the future.​ The exhibition 'The value of ice' presents three artistic positions (performance documentaries) which deals with glacier ice in times of global warming:
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Instead of polishing a car, in his film Iceberg Care (2024) Adam Sébire takes care of an iceberg in Norway. The freshly fallen snow is meticulously swept away with a broom and the shimmering blue ice is made to shine with a spray bottle and cloth.
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Ronald Anzenberger shows a diamond made from glacial ice. In his project Ice Diamonds (2024), he produced countless rugged chunks of ice into sparkling diamonds with smooth surfaces and sharp edges, on the so-called Diamond Beach on Iceland .
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In her performances Glacier Elegy (2017-2024), Jaanika Peerna confronts exhibition visitors with the question: What would you do with the last piece of ice on earth? At the same time, she shows us in an impressive way what she would make of it.
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The Value of Ice
'Art exhibition in a walk-in refrigerated container at temperatures below zero degrees.'
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Exhibition durring: 23 – 24 November 2024
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Open daily: 11 am – 6 pm​
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Location: ​Moorburger Elbdeich 263, 21079 Hamburg, Germany
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Participating artists: Adam Sébire, Jaanika Peerna, Ronald Anzenberger​
Supported by: