Enter the Plastoscene
Augmented reality large screen immersive projectionsTamiko Thiel and /p, 2021
Humans have created a whole new epoch for the denizens of the ocean: the Plastocene. Plastic has become a ubiquitous part of the world's oceans, permeating all layers from the surface down to the darkest depths.
Humans like to consider themselves the Center of Creation, but when it comes to their own plastic creations, they prefer the motto, "Out of sight, out of mind." Since most plastics cannot be recycled, the contents of our overflowing recycling bins are shipped to poorer countries around the world, often being simply dumped into the sea en route or at their final destination. The larger pieces wash up on the beaches or float on the surface in the Great Pacific Trash Vortex. The smaller parts and the degraded micro and nano parts make their way from the North Pole to the South Pole, and down to the ocean floors all over the world.
"Enter the Plastocene" puts people back where they belong: in the middle of the garbage they create, and gives them a sense of what it is like to be surrounded on all sides with garbage. The fish are actually adapting to the Plastocene: astute viewers will note that they actually switch back and forth between piscine and plastic. Viewers who download the "Enter the Plastocene" app onto their own smartphones can guide the schools of fish as they please - but the more they intervene into the ecosystem, the more the fish will turn into plastic waste.
World Premiere: 08. Oct. - 14. Nov. 2021
donumenta ART LAB Gleis 1, Regensburg Central Station, GermanyThe donumenta ART LAB Gleis 1 is an old, abandoned pedestrian underpass at the Regensburg Central Station. With a sound track provided gratis by the announcements and the comings and goings of the trains, visitors descended the stairs into a mysterious "underwater cave," a world of its own far removed from the bustle of a busy train station.
Review: "Im Plastikmeer," (in German) Sabine Reithmaier, Süddeutsche Zeitung
Visitors to an installation of Enter the Plastocene can install our free app and view the artwork on their own smartphones. In the smartphone display, the app seems to fill the physical space around the viewer with more plastic waste corals and fish, bringing an additional level of immersion and interaction to the experience.
Many thanks to Rainer Kühne, a gifted and sensitive photographer of Regensburg and its environs, for use of this photo!