Tag Archives: Global Inheritance
Art Global Inheritance Wants You To Get TRASHed At Coachella
No, not that way, but I like the way you think. Seriously, though, when you’ve got over 75,000 people sharing a wide open space, a lot of trash is bound to be produced. Thankfully, Coachella has made sustainability a big part of their festival experience. Since 2004, Coachella has hosted an art-walk style recycling program that invites artists to design their own refuse bins in hopes of creating an environment that makes—no, wills—people to pitch in and toss their trash where it’s supposed to go.
Art/Design Global Inheritance at Coachella 2010
If you’ve never heard of Global Inheritance, you’re missing out on something big. Here’s an organization that bases its environmental credos on what the world around you can and should be: fun and interactive, in addition to being educational. This year marked GI’s 7th display at Coachella, and featured exercise bikes, human hamster wheels, and an energy see-saw — all hooked up to, and providing power for, a small stage with a DJ on board. Crowd members indulged in both endorphins and the experience of seeing how they could directly help the environment, and got immediate results. Beats having to wait years for the tree you planted to grow!
Event Sweatshop Coming To Coachella
When environmental education group Global Inheritance began their partnership with Coachella in 2004, the idea was a simple as having a bunch of artist apply paint to garbage cans in an effort to encourage recycling while helping to keep the concert grounds debris free. Seven years on, and GI’s efforts at the annual music festival have become some of the weekend’s most talked about activities. Whether it’s exchanging 10 empty water bottles for one full one, or peddling a bicycle to recharge your cell phone, Global Inheritance doesn’t just educate and amuse a few concert goers, it finds a way of making the event better for everyone, even if they never step foot out of the VIP area.
This year, Global Inheritance has come up with their most interactive concept yet. Building on the idea of human power, the group has put together the Sweatshop DJ initiative—a human powered DJ set-up that allows ambitious jocks to take to the decks in the desert, so long as they can bring enough friends to fuel the sound system via their own pedal power. It takes a lot of human movement to keep the juice flowing—12 friends in all, turning cranks, pedaling bikes and running on a gigantic hamster wheel. But the opportunity to rock even a passing crowd at Coachella is too great of an opportunity for amateur DJs to pass up.
“We want to inspire people to rethink the way we look at energy consumption,” explains Global Inheritance founder Eric Ritz, while declining to tell us what music he personally prefers. “It doesn’t matter,” he insists. “I support all shapes and sizes.”
Learn how to be a Sweatshop DJ at globalinheritance.org
Art/Design Gallery Global Inheritance 18 & Up
Global Inheritance’s exhibits are pretty much an expected staple each year at the Coachella Valley Music & Arts Festival. For the past 6 years (out of the 10 that Coachella has been running) G.I. has had a presence, and hopefully has made an impact on its viewers. Dedicated to making activism hip for the next generation to embrace, this non-profit didn’t disappoint.
This year they showed their creativity with the 18 & Up exhibit. 18 & Up being a tongue in cheek reference to golf of course, as they took 7 re-claimed golf carts and re-engineered them to run on alternative forms of energy. Various artists then suped them up paying homage to performers who were in some way involved with this years line up.
Music I Fly Like Paper Get High Like Planes
If you have been living in a cave, or crawl space for the past year you may not know M.I.A. But the rest of us know her as the energetic, charismatic ball of controversy who sings the song Paper Planes “All I want to do is…bang…bang…bang…bang…bang…bang…cock.click.ching…and take your money”! Yes! That song! And it is the cheeriest, playground, gangsta rap single I think I’ve ever sung along to.








