‘Environmental Warnings’ is by Meera Sethi, a Canadian Artist of Indian origin who also has a strong background in design. She combines those mediums in this piece, displayed on four seperate windows.
“Inspired by the work of writers Vandana Shiva and Arundhati Roy, Environmental Warnings is a comment on the invisible, silent toxins we encounter everyday,” she explains in a press release. “Using the language of street signs, I have created symbols that raise our awareness of the many environmental threats that cross an urban space.
“Pesticides, toxic water, landfills, deforestation, nuclear testing, plastics, GMO seeds, gas spills, carbon emissions, water wastage/shortages, energy wastage/shortages, ozone reduction and the patenting of staple foods such as rice are some of the issues I explore. These signs are universal as the toxins are global. Although they impact us differently depending on our privilege, they impact us all. They make equal sense in Toronto or New Delhi, Bangkok or New York.
“The use of soft, pastel colours is deliberate. The colours and the messages are incongruous. The colours signal calm while the symbols signal danger. This irony is a comment on the food industry that uses pleasing packaging to sell us products that are toxic to our health, the environment and society. The childlike colours also reference the impact these invisible, silent toxins are having on children.”
Street signs connote warning if not outright danger, and are a simple, everyday, universally used way to get a point across. In this way, ‘Environmental Warnings’ becomes accessible to everybody.
Patrick Connors


1 comment
Comments feed for this article
September 4, 2010 at 7:21 am
J Peachy
Thanks so much for sharing this Patrick. The colours are so appealing that we forget the extreme danger it is representing
One of these ‘Silent Toxins’ that I have come to be aware of and personally experience is Multiple Chemical Sensitivity. There are hundreds of thousands of products that we are exposed to everyday that use chemical based fragrances to designed to evoke an emotion.
However, most people don’t realize what we are being exposed to. I have a friend who’s reaction is so extreme, that she can have an anaphylactic reaction and go unconscious. I have had to personally save her life on at least two occasions. While not easily understood by those in the medical community, her body reacts to chemicals that she has inhaled in her 20 year career as a school teacher. Exposure to asbestos, new building gas-offs and people with chemical fragrances have all accumulated in her system.
While it is a major burden and has the potential to put barriers on her life, she is doing things to change the world around her such that she can survive.
Many people who deal with mental health concerns have to take pharamaceutical drugs to survive. This is a reality that most have come to accept. However, we also need to be aware of other elements that can affect our health.
For more on potential silent toxins see:
http://www.thecanaryreport.org/
jp