A widespread campaign to get people talking about sustainability is en route to Reno.
Part photo installation, part video montage, part grassroots movement, the Lexicon of Sustainability uses languageโwhich is to say actual words and phrases scrawled onto compelling images and short filmsโto relay messages about food, farming, green living and community.
โWeโre a grassroots collection of everyday heroes,โ says a voice-over in the campaignโs vague yet moving introductory video. โWe translate ideas into information artworks โฆ that become pop-up shows across America.โ
Jacob Nachel, whoโs arranging such a show during Artown at Lost City Farm, says he was impressed with the Lexiconโs realistic approach and recognizable spokespeople.
โThey feature some of the best minds in farming and sustainable food sourcing in the whole world,โ he said.
One is Joel Salatin, for example, a Virginian known for raising beef, pork and poultry who actually dubs himself a โgrass farmer.โ (Salatinโs cows poop, his chickens scratch at the manure and kill maggots thatโd otherwise become flies and bother the cows, more grass grows because the scratched manure becomes fertilizer, the cows graze again, and so on.)
Anyway, things like gluten and GMOs are confusing enough to folks new to the vernacular. Forget terms like โseed sovereignty.โ
The Sustainability Lexicon โis a really good bridge between the people who are leading the movement at the forefront and those who have no idea what that [terminology] means,โ Nachel said, not unkindly. โItโs too much for most people to handle.โ
When he volunteered to launch the pop-up event in Reno, program organizers simply mailed him 24 large, text-covered images by filmmaker and multimedia artist Douglas Gayetonโthe same posters circulating in similar shows across the country. The onus is on him to frame and present them at Lost City and four other places heโll announce soon, then eventually find a school or library to house the posters permanently. And yes, takers are welcome.
Lost City was a fitting location in part because itโs easily accessible on foot for so many people, said Nachel, who approached farmers Toni Ortega and Lyndsey Langsdale with the exhibition idea.
โWe figured itโd be a great union of sorts,โ Ortega said. โWhy not come and be on a sustainable urban farm in town while looking at the images, and kind of create a dialogue? The posters reflect all aspects of sustainabilityโnot just food, but also energy and conservation efforts.
โTheyโre really beautiful images, but theyโre really educational images,โ she continued. โItโs an important piece of work, and itโs exciting that someone like Jacob is making the effort to have this happen in Reno.โ
