Ice trade

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Roithmayr, F. orcid id iconORCID: https://orcid.org/0009-0005-5425-3358, Behr, B., Farmer, G., Haugaard Madsen, L., Henry Longly, G. and Kratz, T. (2007) Ice trade. [Show/Exhibition]

Abstract/Summary

The exhibition title references a 19th-century trade of ice that occurred between Northern Europe, Northern America, and the sub-continent, prior to the development of artificial refrigeration. The history of the ice trade corresponded to a time-specific configuration of environmental and economic processes; several weeks of transit in uninsulated hulls often resulted in quantities of ice being reduced by 50% in mass in the time taken to reach a destination and sales point. The ice trade also featured in Henry David Thoreau's back-to-nature, preservationist classic, Walden, where the ice-harvest of Walden Pond alludes to a clash of environmental assets and sufficiencies. Thoreau's one-man, one-world approach is seemingly inconsolable with the million dollar international ice exports that capitalised on the ponds and lakes of rural Massachussets. These references and their configurations serve as a loose framework for the exhibition at Chelsea Space, where Ice Trade considers questions of translation and material status at different points of reception.

Item Type Show/Exhibition
URI https://reading-clone.eprints-hosting.org/id/eprint/87998
Divisions No Reading authors. Back catalogue items
Arts, Humanities and Social Science > School of Arts and Communication Design > Art > Fine Art
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