Does the world need another gasfield? [2025]
Collaboration with Axel Berger
Performance / Multi-media / Duration: 01:30:00
Statement
A partial reconstruction of the fossil fuel company Shell’s Annual General Meeting, presented as a series of events taking place at IAC and in front of the Mazettihouse. Using installation, theater, and custom computer software, the work unfolds and recontextualizes the company’s discourse, aesthetics, and safety measures.
But it all started about 300 million years ago. At that time, plankton, horsetails, scallops, and other organisms lived – and died. Over time – millions of years – the molecules in their dead bodies were transformed into what we today call crude oil, bitumen, and fossil gas. Much later the compressed bodies of our ancient relatives were extracted from their million-year-old graves, sold, burned, and rose to the sky as gas.
Among the kingdoms of men, an unequal battle began for the shared atmosphere. How much of these gases should corporations, states, and individuals be allowed to send off?
A Dutch court ruled that the fossil fuel company Shell must reduce its emissions by 45%. Two years later, the verdict was overturned.
Shell’s previously dull annual meetings turn into intense spectacles, complete with airport-like security procedures. The corporation tries to maintain a respectable façade, even as activists in disguise chant and are carried away by hired guards.
Meanwhile, Shell is rebranding. Words like clean, low-carbon, and transition are used more frequently. But capital expenditures still go towards fossil fuels. Now, using artificial intelligence, the corporations’ search for new graves to extract, refine, and sell continues.
CONCEPT
Josh Wirz
Axel Berger
PERFORMERS
Adam Skovdal
Azamat Salakhov
Viola Faye
Cecilie Kappel
Max Lewander
Chris Staudinger
Josh Wirz
Axel Berger