GLASGOW.- Little Sun, the clean energy nonprofit, announces Grace of the Sun - a solar powered light poem urging commitment to renewable energy at the UN climate conference (COP26). Created by Scottish artist Robert Montgomery, the artwork has been constructed using 1,000 solar powered Little Sun lights and stands 11 metres wide and 5 metres tall. The giant solar light poem illuminates every day at sunset as a poetic beacon of hope for Glasgow.
After the artworks installation in Glasgow (dates 29th October to 12th November) the work will be dismantled and the lights will join Little Suns wider efforts to provide clean, affordable solar power to the 600 million people living without electricity in Sub Saharan Africa, where the nonprofit has brought solar light and power to over 3 million people to date.
Located at arts and climate justice pop-up The Landing Hub on the Sustainable Glasgow Landing site, the installation is part of Little Suns initiative Reach for the Sun to engage creatives in the global movement to highlight the power of solar to tackle climate change and end energy poverty. It calls for immediate investment in renewable energy on a mass scale and the acceleration of net-zero carbon emissions globally.
The project is enabled by global green energy tech pioneer Octopus Energy Group and supported by Montgomerys agency MTArt Agency, specialists in sustainable art production, the first certified B Corp® UK company within the art sector and a member of the Gallery Climate Coalition. Octopus Energy launched in 2016 with the vision of using technology to make the green energy revolution affordable whilst transforming customer experience. The fast-growth company now operates in 12 countries and is valued at over $4.6bn. Montgomerys studio and home where the artwork has been constructed over the past months, have both been fully powered by Octopus Energy since the projects inception.
Although it provides only 3 percent of the worlds power currently, research suggests that solar can meet the majority of the worlds energy needs by 2040 and is the most powerful means of preventing runaway climate change if implemented now1.
Artist Robert Montgomery says: We are now at the frightening point where the climate crisis has arrived. Im thrilled to collaborate with Little Sun and Octopus Energy - this project is a beacon of hope. Instead of looking under the ground for energy we should have all along been looking up. A solution is visible to us all the time, every day: the sun. Theres a great beauty in the realization that the sun is there to save us, if we only make the effort to reach out to it. I hope that others across the world will join us to tell the story of solars powerful force for good.
Ive long been convinced of the power of art and culture to counteract widespread numbness and create change in the world, added Olafur Eliasson, Little Sun Co Founder. The climate crisis is here; we know what needs to be done. We have the knowledge and technology necessary to transition within the next decade to a world powered by renewable energy. Yet knowledge may not be enough. A work of art like Grace of the Sun can help us to recognise that our lives are inextricably linked to our surroundings, to structures and systems and people beyond our local context. If we expand our sphere of care to encompass the natural elements that support life as we know it, we can formulate a vision of a positive future for the generations to come.
John Heller, CEO of Little Sun, says: "We believe that art can create possibilities for climate action, inspiring global connectivity, promoting positive action and enhancing citizenship engagement. Little Suns work with artists helps us imagine a future that we cant yet fathom - one where all people thrive and share the power of the sun. Were thrilled to have joined forces with Octopus Energy whose commitment to green energy and support for climate artists fits perfectly with our mission. Little Sun, which works with partners to deliver renewable energy to communities in sub-Saharan Africa, is investing in its culture program, says Heller, with the goal of shifting the publics perspective on the climate crisisgrounding the climate conversation not in fear and despair but in hope and possibility for what we can create together.