Tag Archive for 'Climate change'

Efter København i Informeren


I dagens udgave af Information kan man læse min anmeldelse af Christian Skovgaards overrumplende tegneserie Efter København, udgivet for nylig af forlaget Forlæns. Hermed et uddrag af anmeldelsen:

…Skovgaards fejende flotte arkitekturvandring gennem den faldne by, fra Vestervold ind over Dronning Louises Bro til Nørreport, Rådhuspladsen og Slotsholmen, efterfulgt af Christianshavn, Islands Brygge og til sidst DR-byen og Ørestad. Han er uddannet grafiker og billedfortæller, men har i mange år arbejdet med arkitektur, blandt andet som modelbygger. Denne baggrund fremstår klart af de skarpt stiliserede gengivelser af byens topografi, gennem hvilke diagonale snit opdeler før og efter katastrofen.

Billederne er tegnet som vektorgrafik og trykt i to pantonefarver, henholdsvis blågrøn og rød samt, når de blandes, en sortviolet tredjefarve. At tegne sådan er afsindigt arbejdskrævende, hvilket forklarer, at bogen har været over ti år undervejs, men det retlinede resultat forløser på bevægende vis Skovgaards kærlighedserklæring til det byggede miljø generelt og København specifikt.

Læs hele anmeldelsen her hvis abo, og lyt til det seneste afsnit af Radio Rackham, om vores sommerlæsning, i hvilket vi også diskuterer bogen.

The Week


Writing extemporally what’s on my mind was kind of the point of these posts back when I was doing them regularly (i.e. almost weekly), so I guess that’s what I’ll do here for this brief resurfacing on my blog.

It’s a new year, and as usual it holds promise while simultaneously carrying a lot of baggage with it. Just these first few days remind us that people are still dying on the beaches of Europe while an increasingly destructive civil was is going on in the Middle East, Sweden — my neighbouring country as I write this — is instating universal ID checks at the border for the first time in generations, costing the country millions and reminding us all of the profundity of the problem we’re facing in Europe. Oh, and so-called Islamic State has just released another piece of vile agitprop promising bloody murder in Britain, my country of residence. And so on.

Yet, all of this seems strangely unreal to me, in the grip as I am — at least in unguarded moments — of a kind of apocalyptic paralysis. For obvious reasons 2015 was a stark reminder that climate change is almost certain to change the world as we know it over the course of the next generation. All the current problems are negligible in comparison to what’s on the horizon. COP21 arguably provided some cause for optimism, but it seems foolish fully to trust that we will be able to avert the cataclysm science tells us is coming to an extent that doesn’t profoundly upset life everywhere on Earth. Continue reading ‘The Week’

Here I stand