The use of natural materials has been the subject matter researched on for contemporary art,
looking into a new trend of artists using organic elements in independent pieces. As well as a wider
set of insights into the drivers behind this shift, how artists go about it and its broader society-wide
implications. Based on a qualitative methodology — combining content analysis of works,
interviews with the artists and art curators; literature study—the research examines how natural
materials are moving beyond ornamentation to become inseparable from artworks—frequently
pointing out environmental issues.
The results imply that ephemerality is a concept of relevance to many modern artists, using
ephemeral natural resources and creating works which change, rot or disappear. This shift
represents a larger cultural pressure to acknowledge the temporary, precarious qualities of human
beingness that threaten resistant notions of high/low art or "the true and enduring." The research
also explores how such work frequently relates to issues of time, environmental sustainability and
human-nature relations that tend to constitute a form of ecocentric praxis.
This conversation moves between the pragmatic and ethical dilemmas concerning natural
materials, from attempting to make eco-friendly art and balancing that tension with practice-based
logistics. The study finds that using natural materials has become a major theme in contemporary
art, giving new grounds for the re-interpretation of arts and environmental cultural studies. The
research also calls for investigation of the potential use of natural substrates in other cultural
contexts and ethical approaches.
ANALYSIS OF THE USE OF NATURAL MATERIALS IN CONTEMPORARY ART
Published June 2024
Abstract
Language
English
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