Sunday Tribune

Artists create fantastic works from plastic waste

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“FOR one sip of water, we create permanent plastic junk,” artist Arunkumar HG said about 100ml bottles that are part of our highconsum­ption lifestyle.

Sourced from households and schools, hundreds of the bottles are crafted into his massive installati­on made entirely out of everyday plastic trash that reminds citizens of the harmful and lasting carbon footprint small actions generate.

His installati­on, The toxic chamber, is a large cave-like structure with a huge mouth. It is created out of waste – mainly automobile parts, discarded plastic chairs, containers, PET (polyethyle­ne terephthal­ate) bottles and e-waste.

A satire on how easily today’s consumers shirk responsibi­lity of the vast waste generated, the “chamber” allows visitors to stand inside and reflect.

It stands with 10 smaller installati­ons in a municipal corporatio­n of Gurugram-owned open land near Wazirabad Bund and is part of the “Where does it go” project.

The project is an initiative by citizen-led collective Iamgurgaon and Artpilgrim Live gallery.

“When we use plastic, we throw it away bit by bit. We don’t collect it. Just imagine, this could be one person’s usage in just three to four years. For one sip of water, we are creating permanent plastic junk.

“When we come and confront it closely is when we realise that we can’t separate it from us unless we change our habits,” Arunkumar said.

The Karnataka-born artist, now a local of Gurugram, thinks of the chamber as a functional space where people can visualise what they throw away, and therefore begin to alter their behaviour.

After a waste collection drive in schools, homes and corporate houses last month, he led a team of 12 local artists who have been working on 10 smaller installati­ons using scrap.

Young artist Pinaki R Mohanty’s work surrounded e-waste and waste pickers, mostly children, who segregate our waste under hazardous conditions from landfills.

Using sharp humour, Mohanty has depicted a life-like “garbage man” with a plastic detector – as compared to a metal detector – to communicat­e the need to segregate our waste in categories to reduce waste while providing waste pickers a safer work environmen­t.

“We think and act in ‘yes’ and ‘no’ terms. When we have to throw an empty wrapper, we think ‘yes’ it should be dumped properly, but we actually do ‘no’ by littering when no one is looking. That understand­ing must be there,” he said.

Other installati­ons are themed around waste impacting marine and land animals that ingest waste: a throne made of glass and plastic bottles, which shows that throwing waste is comfortabl­e, but sitting on a waste throne is deeply discomfort­ing. There is also a photo-frame made from CDS and waste.

Artist Ramkumar Kannadasan, who has a background in horticultu­re, has created a huge hand of plastic – Steal the treasure of nature – that depicts landfills impinging upon the growth of trees planted on them.

“Where does it go” raises questions on the future of waste once it leaves our hands.

“The idea is to ‘feel the waste’ and how we can visualise the consequenc­es of what each of us is generating in the city. When you see this, you realise it is not somebody else’s problem. It is also about how art can play a social and environmen­tal role apart from being an aesthetic device.

“This is a very different approach. It is meaningful, and deeply connected to ecology and people. The installati­ons are spaces of introspect­ion, reflection and eventually, transforma­tion through experience,” Iamgurgaon co-founder Swanzal Kak Kapoor said. | IANS.

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