For Getty’s PST ART: Art & Science Collide, SCI-Arc presents Views of Planet City—calling for a radical re-envisioning of a sustainable planetary future, opening Friday, September 13 in the SCI-Arc Gallery and Saturday, September 14 at the Pacific Design Center Gallery.
Views of Planet City is among more than 60 exhibitions and programs presented as part of PST ART—Getty’s landmark regional event that returns in September 2024 with its latest edition, PST ART: Art & Science Collide, highlighting the intersections of art and science, both past and present. For more information, please visit pst.art.
The exhibition is based on lead curator Liam Young’s transmedia project Planet City that explores implications of Edward O. Wilson’s “Half-Earth” proposal to remove at least 50% of our planet’s land and marine areas from human use and set them aside for preservation and regeneration of biodiversity. In Young’s sci-fi vision, humanity has retreated into Planet City, a single city housing 10 billion people—the projected human population of Earth in 2050—surrendering most of the world to a global-scaled wilderness and the return of stolen lands.
Views of Planet City premieres new components of Young’s evolving body of work along with interrelated projects by SCI-Arc faculty Jennifer Chen, John Cooper, Damjan Jovanovic, and Angelica Lorenzi. Critically and imaginatively examining the effects emerging out of Planet City’s wildly speculative but plausible premise, Views of Planet City challenges dystopian visions of the future, offering both an immersive, interactive experience and a blueprint for a sustainably urbanized planet. A project of radical optimism driven by cinematic sensibility and architectural thinking; Views of Planet City conjures a new planetary imaginary for our age of urban transitions.