Art and Climate

posted by Neil Gaiman

I really ought to blog about making Good Omens (we're in week 4 of shooting) and making Anansi Boys (starts shooting next week), and about the astonishing Ocean at the End of the Lane play at the Duke of York's Theatre in London (and now that I've said this, I know I will) but yesterday I spoke (via Zoom, because of Covid Protocols) at COP26, the Conference of the Parties on Climate Action, and I thought I ought to just put what I said up here. So it doesn't get lost.



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Art is how we communicate. Art began when we left marks to say we were here. 
The oldest art we have is the 200,000 handprints of Neanderthal or Denisovan children, on the Tibetan Plateau, making marks of their hands because it was fun, because they could, and because it told the world they had been there.
The human family tree has been around for millions of years, Homo Sapiens for a much shorter time. We are not a successful branch of the tree, because, unless we use our mighty brains to think our way out of this one, we don't have a very long time left.
We need to use everything at our disposal to change the world, and show that we can compete with the ones who were here before us. And by compete I mean, not make the world uninhabitable by humans. The world will be fine, in the long run. There have been extinction events before us, and there will be extinction events after we���ve gone.
When I was young I wrote a short comics story about the use of the planet Earth as a decorative ornament. It was about our tendency to destroy ourselves. Back then, I worried about nuclear war: one huge event that would end everything. Now I'm worried that we are messing things up a little at a time, until everything tips.
We who explore futures need to build fictional futures that inspire and make us carry on. When I was a kid, it was going to the stars that was the dream. Now it has to be fixing the mess that we've left behind, and not just walking away, leaving the Earth a midden.

We need to change the world back again. And that will take science, but it will also take art. To convince to inspire and to build a future.

We need to reach people's hearts, not just their minds. Reach the part of their hearts that believes it's good to plant trees for our grandchildren to sit beneath. Reach hearts to make people want to change, and to react to people and organisations despoiling the planet and the climate in the same way you would react to someone trying to burn down your house, while you are living in it.

So that 200,000 years from now, children can leave handprints in clay, to show us that they were here, and because making handprints and footprints is fun.


Labels:  art, climate change

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Published on November 13, 2021 15:27
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message 1: by L (new)

L It warms my heart considerably to read your words this cold snowy morning. Thank you Neil.


message 2: by Hali (new)

Hali Davidson I like it! My husband and I went vegan a few years ago to help with climate change, and now I'm trying out eco-minimalism. It's so inconvenient and difficult! But, hearing people like you talk about it motivates me to try. So, thanks, friend!


message 3: by Sue (new)

Sue I am with you on this. Each of us can do something to make a change and a difference to reduce our impact on earth, from the "bottom" up. And then build that. I am beginning to see shift as individuals act. Thank you, Neil.


message 4: by [deleted user] (new)

The best thing that could happen to the planet would be humans becoming an "extinction event". We are a nasty, selfish species. We take and we take and we take and add nothing of value to the world. We won't kill the planet. We might kill damn near every living thing on it, but when we're long gone, and we will be, the Earth will be better than fine without us.


message 5: by Sylvia (new)

Sylvia Thank you, Neal, for this hopeful reminder! We all have our individual roles to play, and rather than bewailing what we cannot do we can focus on what we can. Personally I have been working to minimize single use plastic and garbage of all sorts, and recycle all I can. At this point the heftiest part of my garbage is the cat litter ;-)


message 6: by K.C. (new)

K.C. Herbel Most excellent plea!
LET'S DO IT!


message 7: by Steve (new)

Steve Laurie wrote: "The best thing that could happen to the planet would be humans becoming an "extinction event". We are a nasty, selfish species. We take and we take and we take and add nothing of value to the world..."

We do take and take, but we also add. In the best case we don’t take so much that we destroy the good. One thing we add is art.


message 8: by Taranom (new)

Taranom I am really waiting for Good Omens. I loved first season and I hope the second one is great as well


message 9: by Steffane (new)

Steffane beautifully said!


message 10: by Monica (new)

Monica Stanciu Hi! I am a Romanian lawyer and today I was embarking on the continuation of my PhD research on international law. I just read your post, and this is to inform you that you might be quoted in my current writing. How sad that we have to live this history we are making! In the end, with Darwin we were proudly reporting that we are better than apes, but are we better after all??? (Rhetorical question :)) Homo homini lupus - maybe this self-distruction is innate. I never understood why war is needed either, read about it all my life and was lucky enough not to be caught in one.
Kind regards&congrats, Monica


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