The Water Book review – a compelling insight into this vital resource

ocean exploration history

the waterbook 2015


Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “The Water Book review – a compelling insight into this vital resource” was written by Sukhdev Sandhu, for The Observer on Sunday 21st June 2015 10.00 UTC

Water is everywhere. And almost everywhere is water. Nasa scientists have discovered a black hole 12 billion light years from Earth around which sits a water reservoir that itself spans hundreds of light years and has 140 trillion times the water in the world’s oceans. Scientists have also found evidence of a wet zone within the Earth’s crust that contains as much water as in all the oceans. A foetus is around 95% water, while adults are almost 70% water. Even our bones are 22% water.

Water is everywhere and yet, according to Alok Jha, infinitely mysterious. Scientists know more about outer space than they do about the depths of the ocean. Water is made from such light atoms that at room temperature it should be a gas rather than a liquid. “By the usual rules of chemistry, our Earth should have no oceans at all – all of the water on our planet should exist as vapour, producing a thick, muggy atmosphere that sits above a bone-dry surface.” Even ice cubes in drinks are anomalous: they are solids that float on a liquid version of themselves.

So water is hard to understand. If you struggled with chemistry at school there will be chunks of Jha’s book that will pass you by. Fortunately, he understands the value of metaphor and simile. “If we think of life on Earth as a vast series of trades and transactions,” he says at one point, “water is the currency in which these exchanges are made.” Later, he argues that water is not just the cradle in which life can happen, it’s “the crane, the scaffolding and mortar of existence”. And elsewhere: “It would only be a mild exaggeration to call it the Earth’s blood system.”

Jha declares that his book is not about climate change, but he does offer many reasons to be anxious on that front. The warming of the surface of the ocean and its impact on nutrients is likely to create “dead zones”, oxygen-deprived expanses where larger fish cannot survive. Extra CO2 in the atmosphere leads to acidification that imperils coral reefs. Rising sea levels, a particular threat to people living in the western Pacific and south-east Asia, will not only have an impact on coastal ecosystems, but provoke extreme flooding. Marine life is resilient and adaptable, but the changes that have taken place over the last 150 years may take millennia to reverse.

This is something of a golden age for hydropoetics. Works such as Roger Deakin’s Waterlog (1999), Philip Hoare’s The Sea Inside (2013) and Rose George’s Deep Sea and Foreign Going (2013) have offered antidotes to what the American artist and theorist Allan Sekula called the terracentrism of much contemporary thought. Jha, an award-winning science broadcaster, includes an account of a trip he took from New Zealand to Antarctica in the footsteps of the early 20th-century explorer and geologist Douglas Mawson, but for the most part he ignores the humanistic, social and philosophical questions that thinking about water may provoke.

He does, however, provide some remarkable images, including that of a stellar firehose in the northern constellation Perseus where a protostar pumps out – every second and at a speed of 200,000km per hour – a hundred million times the volume of water that flows through the Amazon. Even his description of how water is thought to have come to Earth – in asteroids described as “dirty cosmic snowballs” that battered the planet from 4.5 billion to 3.8 billion years ago – boggles the imagination. Perhaps in keeping with its infinite and infinitely connective subject, The Water Book ends up reading like a work of science fiction as much as a scientific treatise.

The Water Book is published by Headline (£20). Click here to order it for £16

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Go East review – Ai Weiwei’s overcoat and other ambiguities of Asian art

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Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Go East review – Ai Weiwei’s overcoat and other ambiguities of Asian art” was written by Andrew Frost, for theguardian.com on Monday 25th May 2015 04.41 UTC

Go East is a curious exhibition. The name suggests a grand and sweeping overview of the art of an entire region of the world and it’s certainly that. But it’s also a curious venture because of the way the show is curated, staged and promoted. Split into two parts, the bulk is at the Art Gallery of NSW, while the other part – consisting of a single giant artwork – is in Paddington at the Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation (SCAF).

Before we discuss the art, some background. The South African-born Shermans are a key power couple in the Australian art world. Brian is a self-made multimillionaire whose passion for art, animal welfare and philanthropy is probably only equalled by that of his wife, the indefatigable Dr Gene, who ran the Sherman Gallery, one of Australia’s leading contemporary galleries for 21 years until 2008 when it morphed into the foundation.

The foundation is dedicated to exhibiting work from Australian and Asia-Pacific region artists and so, beyond the exhibitions it has staged, the Shermans have also bought a considerable amount of art from this very loosely defined area, predominantly by contemporary Chinese artists, but also by a selection from Japan, Tibet, India, Vietnam, Thailand and the Philippines, as well as some artists now resident or born in Australia, the UK and elsewhere.

That exhibitions based on private collections tend to be more illustrative of the taste of the collectors than evidence of a coherent curatorial survey is just one of the problematic aspects of Go East. The rather expansive definition of what constitutes Asia – and the nature of the collection itself – waylays any claim for the show to be more than an admittedly fascinating peek into the Shermans’ horde. How this show came into being is explained by a quote from artist Ai Weiwei on the art gallery’s web site: “Everything is art. Everything is political.”

With 30 individual works spread through the foyer and upstairs space at the Art Gallery of NSW, the immediate standouts are the eye-catching installation of Lin Tianmiao’s Badges (2009) and Jitish Kallat’s Public Notice 2 (2007). Both works are about language: Tianmiao’s giant circular embroidery frames spell out words in Chinese and Pinyin (Chinese words written with Latin letters).

Ai Weiwei”s Overcoat (2009). Photograph: Jenni Carter, AGNSW/The Gene & Brian Sherman Collection, and Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation

Kallat’s long installation wall work features the text of a speech given by Gandhi in 1930, as he walked 390km to the coast to make salt from sea water in defiance of the British government’s salt tax. Gandhi’s words are rendered in resin and made to look like bones, placed on shelves against a bright yellow wall.

Both Kallat’s and Tianmiao’s work mix the decorative with meaning to mixed results. While both have a visual impact, the treatment of the text is either ambiguous, as in Tianmiao’s work, or overdone, as in Kallat’s.

The rather serene ambiguity of Ai Weiwei’s works is a pleasurable contrast. Overcoat (2009) is a mounted and boxed military winter coat of the type the artist gave away to the poor, his name subtly embroidered on the inside. The wall text informs us that the artist liked the fact the recipients of his charity were unaware they were wearing a work of art and wouldn’t care if they did know. The large wooden box of paper and the mounted and framed calligraphy of his 2015 work, An Archive, has both presence and blankness – unless you read Chinese the content of the work eludes you but, like the winter coat, it exists as both an object and idea.

Shigeyuki Kihara, an artist of Samoan and Japanese heritage, is represented in the collection by a series of photographs in which she performs the cliches of western art in a series of poses that recall exotica of the 19th and 20th century while also undermining expectations of gender and family roles and femininity.

The intentional confusion of sign and meaning in Kihara’s work is a link between many of the works in the exhibition, but where in western contemporary art the “truth” of the work is much more apparent to the western viewer – and usually effaced by irony – the work in Go East relies on an understanding of very specific cultural contexts. Kihara’s art is accessible in a way that many others here are not.

Zhang Huan’s Family Tree (2000), Go East
One of the nine images in Zhang Huan’s Family Tree (2000). Photograph: The artist/The Gene & BrianSherman Collection, and Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation

Yang Fudong’s 2004 work Seven Intellectuals in a Bamboo Forest Part 4 (Still) is decidedly ambiguous even when you learn that it is a still from a movie.

Zhang Huan’s Family Tree (2000), a series of nine images of the artist’s face progressively overpainted with Chinese text until it is black, feels significant without a real sense of why.

The books of Yang Zhichao’s Chinese Bible 2009 (detail).
Yang Zhichao’s Chinese Bible (detail). Photograph: Jenni Carter/Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation

Over in Paddington, Yang Zhichao’s Chinese Bible (2009) is a massive performance installation work of 3,000 personal diaries bought by the artist from a market, each used by an unknown person some time between 1949 and 1999, accompanied by a video on the wall of the artist cleaning each diary cover by hand. Looking into various diaries, you find within a variety of uses – a personal journal, a sketchbook of images, a schoolbook, a doctor’s notebook and so on – with iPads providing translations of small sections of the texts. The work charts the impact of decades of tumultuous post-war Chinese history as seen by the people who lived it. Yet that experience remains at a distance, too, formally impressive but emotionally ambiguous. In the face of all this, what are we meant to feel?

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56th Venice Biennale review – more of a glum trudge than an exhilarating adventure

There’s an awful lot of fretting about the state of the world in the Biennale’s 88 national pavilions, but little power, wit or bravado

Rem Koolhaas crafts a spectacular ‘city of art’ for Prada in Milan

A new Roman Polanski film is being shown, Jeff Koons and Donald Judd artworks are strewn about, and Wes Anderson’s designed the kitsch cafe … in a scruffy industrial corner of Milan, Rem Koolhaas and Miuccia Prada have made a dazzling art space, so vast it’s practically a city. Oliver Wainwright is in awe

The future of luxury goods – from toxic waste urns to a compass that helps you get lost

A refreshing new exhibition at the V&A questions what luxury is and where it’s heading … and proves that £100k watches and fabulous fur hats count for nothing if you don’t have the ultimate luxury of time and space