“We need to become the hope”, Eskimo shaman Angaangaq on the spiritual significance of climate change

“We need to become the hope”, Eskimo shaman Angaangaq on the spiritual significance of climate change

When it comes to land travel the Eskimo people, also known as Inuit, have a good understanding of what distances mean as their land stretched over 13 time zones – yet according to their Elders, the greatest distance in one’s existence remains from one’s mind to one’s heart. “It is really true,” says Angaangaq Angakkorsuaq, an indigenous Eskimo-Kalaallit

Lorenzo Quinn. Why people are taking notice of giant hands emerging from a Venice canal

Lorenzo Quinn. Why people are taking notice of giant hands emerging from a Venice canal

Two marble-white nine-metre tall children’s hands surging from the Grand Canal in Venice and ambiguously supporting or toppling over the Ca’ Sagredo hotel have skyrocketed sculptor Lorenzo Quinn to fame. The installation Support has captured the world’s attention with its powerful message about climate change: we have the power to either sustain or destroy our global heritage. Its location