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Arts and Minds

Showin' in the Wind

Could a wind-energy art exhibit shape public opinion?

By Mark Baard
13 Jun 2006
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As an artist, Mark Beesley is drawn to subjects that others might find repellant.

Beesley lives only a few miles from the Sizewell nuclear power station in Britain, and has occasionally made the plant the subject of his work. Despite his opposition to nuclear power, Beesley admits to a fascination with the plant's design. "When you drive by it, you see this semicircular dome looming over the trees," he says. "It's a powerful presence."

© Mark Beesley
Images courtesy REimaginations.
But nukes are nothing compared to one of Beesley's true obsessions: wind turbines. He paints the emblems of wind power -- a form of energy he does support -- towering over grazing farm animals and casting long shadows over cultivated land. "My interest in wind turbines as an artist is the actual structures," he says. "Seen abstractly, as sculptures, they are very beautiful."

And Beesley's portrayals of them are popular, at least with some audiences: last week, a wind-industry executive purchased one of his oil paintings at a wind-energy art exhibit in Pittsburgh.

Yes, that's right, a wind-energy art exhibit. The show -- unveiled at a meeting of the American Wind Energy Association and viewable online -- is almost certainly the world's first to have such a focus. By collecting paintings, drawings, posters, and postcards that depict windmills as sleek and simple even as they loom over their natural surroundings, organizer Andrew Perchlik hopes to dispel myths about the aesthetic effects of wind farms on their surroundings.

Perchlik -- who is executive director of Renewable Energy Vermont, a trade association promoting wind-farm construction in the state -- makes no secret of his industrial aspirations. He created the exhibit to help combat the NIMBY factor vexing developers from Nantucket Sound to the Great Lakes, and hopes to help sway a public that's under the spell of ad campaigns portraying wind farms as sources of visual pollution. "If people see wind depicted as art, they will intrinsically see it as more beautiful," he says, adding that he'll continue accepting new contributions to the online exhibit over the coming year.

© Anne Subercaseaux.
There's no denying that wind farms can dramatically alter oceanfront views, disrupt the shape of mountain ridgelines, and impose themselves on prairie sunsets. Indeed, in many of the pieces in the exhibit, it looks as if someone planted massive metal tubes above rows of lettuce, or erected giant fans to mesmerize merchant marines in shipping lanes. But Perchlik maintains that turbines possess an innate appeal -- especially compared to, say, a coal-burning plant.

And the participating artists, who hail from North America, England, Serbia, and Croatia, seem to agree. Most of them did not create their pieces specifically for this exhibit, and many said they've long been interested in the clash of industry and nature, whether it plays out in the form of turbines or other technologies.

Contributor Barbara Ekedahl once created a woodblock print of a high-tension power-line tower -- which she later sold to an electric company executive. The subject of her art "doesn't necessarily have to be something I like," says Ekedahl, who does admit that she would love to get her Vermont home off the grid by erecting a turbine on her property. "It has to be something of interest on the landscape. In that case [the power-line image], I wanted the challenge of carving something with those fine lines."

© Aleksandar Rodic.
While some may appreciate the bold, industrial visions of Beesley and Ekedahl, those responsible for marketing wind power may favor the exhibit's "greener" interpretations. Some pieces, such as Anne Subercaseaux's "Spirit of the Hills," portray turbines as mere wisps along mountain ridgelines. And Aleksandar Rodic's "Energy Plant" -- one of only two works created specifically for the exhibit -- envisions turbines and towers as the bright petals and stems of spring flowers. (The Serbian artist's painting won first prize in Pittsburgh.)

Mike Gauthier, who contributed a fine-art print to the exhibit, recognizes that wind farms can have an impact on the land, but says he is a bit mystified by the debate raging in his home state of Vermont over plans to build wind farms along ridgelines. "[Wind] has one of the smallest footprints overall," he says. "It's far better than digging for fuel."

© Mike Gauthier.
Gauthier said the turbines in Vermont's showcase Searsburg wind farm are like "kinetic sculptures." Ekedahl said the Searsburg turbines look like "benign sentinels" when they're inactive.

But some Vermonters are decrying the potential loss of their familiar vistas, as are residents of states from Massachusetts to Michigan. Such aesthetic opposition to wind farms is as common in the U.K. as in the United States, Beesley says, noting local opposition to the erection of 300-foot-plus wind turbines in an old airfield near his home.

Like the other artists, Beesley rejects the view that renewable energy must have zero impact. "I don't buy this argument the countryside has to be preserved," he said. "The landscape is constantly changing."

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writes about the environment, business, and technology for major newspapers and websites. He is living undercover as a suburban schnook as he prepares his escape to life off the grid in the Green Mountains of Vermont.
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Have to agree

Three reasons for agreeing with this aesthetic viewpoint on wind turbines:

  1. As Mark says, the landscape is always changing, but more importantly, the landscape is merely the subjective perception of space by humans. Wildlife does not give two hoots about what the land looks like it is biodiversity and ecological stability that matters.

  2. The aesthetic opposition to wind turbines is very rarely based on a true visual assessment of the impact. In my area (Essex, UK) there is great local opposition to a wind farm planned for a field next to a decommissioned nuclear power station. These are people who chose to live next to nuclear waste but cannot bear the thought of 20-odd turbines in a field. Widespread opposition is, surprise, surprise, funded by the nuclear lobby in the shape of an organisation called Country Guardian. If they were true guardians of the countryside they would also be protesting about coal, oil, nuclear, road building (oh yes, they do, but only when it is to a wind farm) etc. They are not.

  3. I like wind turbines. I think they are truly elegant and a powerful symbol of hope.

Keith Farnish
http://www.theearthblog.org
http://www.reduce3.com

Keith Farnish www.theearthblog.org
Floating art

Clean energy as art, art as clean energy.  from Norway.

http://www.hydro.com/library/images/press_room/news/2005_11/vind_01.jpg

Please use these for the cape wind project, far enough offshore so the NIMBYs don't see 'em.  Outa sight, outa mind.

http://amazngdrx.blogharbor.com/blog John Schneider, Northern Wisconsin

sorry, beauty is not quite evident

To use an ancient Greek aesthetic distinction, the two bunches of wind turbines that I have ever seen -- just north of LA, on some rolling treeless steep hills, and in southwestern Kansas, on a treeless plain -- were not so much "beautiful" as "sublime."  That is, they did not elicit a sense of serenity, harmony and peace; rather, I was more impressed by their power and magnificence, their amazing awesomeness.

There are some machines, whose function involves the collection of energy, of which there are many indisputably beautiful examples.  They include pre-industrial water mills; the original Old-World windmills, such as those in Greece, Holland and La Mancha, Spain; and boats and ships powered by sail.  Some sailing ships can be sublime without ceasing to be beautiful.

For beauty's sake, material matters, and size matters.  The closer to hand-made, by human hands, the better.  The closer to human-scale, the better.

I never thought it would be possible to make an ugly big sailing vessel.  And yet that has been done.  The racing yachts designed to compete for the America's Cup are shockingly dull.  They are just a lot of pumped-in carbon-based molecules, of a certain weight, fitted into a digitally designed mould, of a certain shape.  The mind of these designers and makers is admirable enough; their eye, however, is questionable.  Remembering one of these boring, recyclable, trashable harbor-cloggers, a Katharine Hepburn could never imaginably say to a Carey Grant (as she did about an elegant sailing vessel in "The Philadelphia Story"), "My, she was yar."

When our craftsmen are true artisans, working with materials that themselves are pleasant to look at or feel, and alive to what a finished product can look like, and agreeing that what the product looks like matters, then there remains the strong possibility that they will create something beautiful, including windmills, sailing ships, bell towers and their bells, clock towers and their clocks.  But when all that matters is the numbers in record-keepers' books, not what the thing looks like, feels like, smells like, sounds like, then those craftsmen are not going to be able to give us anything better, aesthetically, than those boring plastic boats, and these unappealing wind turbines.

And so, aesthetically at least, the story of wind turbines is not promising so far.  It is hard to see how they can be considered truly beautiful: first because they are too big, far beyond a scale in which human beings can control them; secondly because they are made of materials that are incomprehensible to most human beings, produced, shaped, transported and erected in ways that are utterly incomprehensible, and anyway are not in themselves pleasing to look at; thirdly because the shape of every part is formed by research done by ivory-tower specialists, referring always, consistently, to efficiency models, not to considerations of appearance.

I am highly in favor of the development of wind farms; I am in favor of the Cape Wind project; and I suspect the wind turbines there will add to the interest of the seascape, a few miles off Cape Cod.  Nevertheless, it is not at all clear that they would be beautiful.  Very likely sublime; but not beautiful.  That should not be an obstacle to going ahead with the project.  But we fans of wind power should acknowledge that the objections of opponents on aesthetic grounds are not unreasonable.

Chickens deserve our true friendship! So do fish! So do other sentient beings! Let us learn to be kind.

Why are lighthouses beautiful?

Many people view lighthouses as aesthetically beautiful, worthy of postcards, calendars, and art exhibitions.  Perhaps some of this this beauty is because of their historical context of beacons of safety...and of course because of their elegant construction and design, in many cases.  

Are not wind turbines beacons of a clean energy future, of safety through a reduction in pollution?  Can they not be constructed elegantly?

I wonder if lighthouses were considered beautiful when they were first constructed?  I do not know...but I believe that when we can recognize the factors which make these monstrous, light-emitting towers pleasing to the human eye then we may be able to apply these same principles to both the design as well as the public perception of wind turbines.  

"historical context"

Old-fashioned lighthouses, i.e. those involving masonry and a conical-section structure, are indeed considered beautiful by many people.  Thanks, Robstenger, for mentioning them.

The Pharos of Alexandria, a Hellenistic-Greek construction, in Ptolemaic Egypt, one of the greatest architectural projects defining Hellenistic civilization, is usually numbered among the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World.  It has not survived, but a few representations have.  No doubt it was especially impressive for uniting within a single image and idea the four Empedoclean elements, earth, water, air, fire, all comprehended and controlled by human reason and industry, represented by the admirable geometry of the lighthouse tower.  No doubt the idea of the Pharos as a benefaction to seafarers, made possible by the Ptolemies, the benefactors, the Greek kings and queens of Egypt, the last of whom was Cleopatra, was intended to be present in every image, and especially so in the spectacular view of the Pharos itself, alas forever lost.  But I think that connexion between the astounding tower's usefulness to humanity and the benefaction of a race of divine-seeming kings and queens surely tends to place the tower more in the category of "the sublime" than "the beautiful."

The American painter Edward Hopper (1882-1967), inspired by many examples of many kinds of American vernacular architecture, found in lighthouses a worthy subject.  No doubt he loved the shapes of the buildings, their situation on a rugged coast, the coastal sunlight shining on them, the conical-section, candy-striped towers.  Unclear if he thought much about the people who lived in them, or about the folks in boats at sea who relied on their light at night.

And I know nothing about whether the automated coastal lights, now in place, performing the function of those old lighthouses, have been recognized as a worthy subject by any artist.  It is very possible; but I suspect that would have more to do with how they look, than with what good they bring to society.

I share your hope, Robstenger, that wind turbines be recognized as beautiful things.  I do not share your hopefulness.

Chickens deserve our true friendship! So do fish! So do other sentient beings! Let us learn to be kind.

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