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Radioactive Ming vases echo our toxic dependency on electronics – we make money not art

Last year, the Unknown Fields Division, a nomadic design studio that explores peripheral landscapes, industrial ecologies and precarious wilderness, travelled to Asia to follow the path of the symbol of globalization: the massive container ship. The group came back with amazing stories, images, videos and with a set of radioactive Ming vases made from the toxic waste of our electronic gadgets.

LONDON SCULPTURE WORKSHOP, ENGLAND – MARCH 17, 2015

Each object is made from the amount of toxic waste created in the production of three items of technology – a smartphone, a featherweight laptop and the cell of a smart car battery. Besides, the vases are sized in relation to the amount of waste created in the production of each item.

Rare Earthenware – Full Film from Toby Smith on Vimeo.

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