Decade of Change

The Jockey Club Museum of Climate Change is always exploring innovative and engaging means to enhance public understanding of climate change.  We are proud to present, in collaboration with the UK-based digital media organization 1854 Media and British Journal of Photography, the ‘Decade of Change’ exhibition designed to document the defining matter of our time: the climate crisis.

This exhibition showcases the winning photographs of the inaugural Decade of Change award chosen by a jury of leading figures in politics, activism, science and the arts.  Sponsored by 1854 and British Journal of Photograph, the award is a global environmental initiative designed to harness the universal power of art and imagery to galvanize climate action.  This exhibition in Hong Kong represents the very first stop of a global exhibition that publicizes the award.

Decade of Change has united artistic voices from around the world in an urgent and masterful exploration of the climate crisis — celebrating all that we have to protect, and warning against all that we have to lose.

In the Story Competition, Vivay Jodha’s First Witnesses tells the poignant story of Indian farmers who committed suicide after erratic climate-induced weather patterns made their farms unviable and destroyed, thus destroying their livelihoods.  Evangelos Daskalakis’s Kawsak Sacha (The Living Jungle), meanwhile, ruminates on humankind’s capacity to co-exist with the natural world, using as an example amongst an indigenous Kichwa community in the Ecuadorian Amazonia.

Inspired by the UN Sustainable Development Goals, the Single Image Competition covers the categories ‘People’, ‘Urban’, ‘Nature’ and ‘Futures’.  Lena C. Emery, one of the winners, highlights the little-known ability of fungi to perform a vital service in relieving the pressures we put on the natural world and its resources.  Raquel Rivas Navas considers the implications of an impending wave of ‘climate migration’ as certain regions are rendered uninhabitable due to climate change.  Slater King muses on the human cost of plastic pollution.

This exhibition has been curated by the CUHK Jockey Club Museum of Climate Change (MoCC) in collaboration with 1854 Media.  The text accompanying the artwork has been lightly edited by the MoCC for the benefit of its intended audience.  For the original text please refer to https://www.1854.photography/awards/decade-of-change/winners/.

First Witnesses

The Living Jungle

People

Urban

Nature

Futures

Address
Yasumoto International Academic Park 8/F
The Chinese University of Hong Kong
Shatin, NT, Hong Kong
Phone
3943 9632
Mail
mocc@cuhk.edu.hk
Opening hours
Monday, Tuesday, Thursday to Saturday: 9:30 am – 5:00 pm
Wednesday, Sunday, Public Holidays and University Holidays
(24th and 31st December, and Lunar New Year Eve): Closed