Award 2021
Welcome to the Social Art Award 2021 – Online Gallery!
We are grateful for the many inspiring contributions from artists around the world. The selected works reflect a broad spectrum of contemporary social art practices and explore new relationships between humans, nature, and technology. They address themes such as ecological regeneration, climate justice, sustainable futures, social resilience, and more-than-human perspectives.
Below you will find the submissions from the Social Art Award 2021 – New Greening edition that passed the initial jury round. The Online Gallery offers public visibility to these works and encourages dialogue around their ideas and approaches; it does not replace the final jury decision.
Thank you to all artists for sharing your visionary and committed work. We invite you to explore the gallery and engage with the perspectives shaping New Greening.
Poster Edition Klimaquartett
Lukasz Chrobok Carmen Gloger
The "Poster Edition is for everyone who loves and thinks diversity: ‘The earth is beautiful!’ And want to ensure that it stays that way in the future. light blue, pink red, black and white. Everything around us is information. We live in a coded world that continuously sends signals, searches for projection surfaces and creates images in us. Pictures that were mostly designed by white men. How inseparable language, image and (sensory) perception are - how powerful and formative for society - is already evident in the little things in the cradle, in which colors, gender roles and black-and-white thinking determine the path of life. So if we want to change and shape society in the long term, we have to review old thought patterns, put them down, be creative in words and pictures in order to create space for new thoughts of freedom, responsibility and society.
The "Poster Edition is for everyone who loves and thinks diversity: ‘The earth is beautiful!’ And want to ensure that it stays that way in the future. light blue, pink red, black and white. Everything around us is information. We live in a coded world that continuously sends signals, searches for projection surfaces and creates images in us. Pictures that were mostly designed by white men. How inseparable language, image and (sensory) perception are - how powerful and formative for society - is already evident in the little things in the cradle, in which colors, gender roles and black-and-white thinking determine the path of life. So if we want to change and shape society in the long term, we have to review old thought patterns, put them down, be creative in words and pictures in order to create space for new thoughts of freedom, responsibility and society.


