Portfolio: Finnish-born artist Tea Makipaa confronts the prospect of ecological disaster

 

Gillian Orr
Friday 16 May 2014 16:13 EDT
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Arresting sight: Atlantis sees a small cabin tilted precariously to one side, and placed in the middle of a lake or river at European destinations such as Budapest and Reykjavik
Arresting sight: Atlantis sees a small cabin tilted precariously to one side, and placed in the middle of a lake or river at European destinations such as Budapest and Reykjavik (Tea Makipaa)

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If you were to come across some of Tea Makipaa's work without realising it was art, it might well give you a shock. Sinking houses and burning cars are just some of the ways in which the Finnish-born artist confronts the prospect of impending ecological disaster.

Working across installation, photography, video, and sculpture, Makipaa tackles everything from global consumer culture, to the relationship between nature and technology. "Spending my childhood in Finland in the 1970s and 1980s, we were introduced to these problems through education and public discussion," she says.

Atlantis (created along with Halldor Ulfarsson), which sees a small cabin tilted precariously to one side, and placed in the middle of a lake or river at European destinations such as Budapest and Reykjavik, is a particularly arresting sight. It is usually anchored in one place and kept afloat with the help of pontoons. As well as making out the soft light coming from the windows, passers-by would also be able to distinguish the sounds of a normal family life being emitted from the house, the "occupants" seemingly unaware of their fate.

So, has anyone ever raised the alarm after seeing one of her pieces out of context? "My method is that I try to compress reality," she insists. "Therefore confusion is welcome."

'Art & Ecology Now', by Andrew Brown, is published by Thames & Hudson, priced £29.95

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