Wolfe work makes finalist of The Anthem Awards (The Webby Awards newest initiative)
New York Times at COP26 with Beatie Wolfe, Es Devlin and Nicola Sturgeon
TED Women invited Beatie Wolfe to hold a MasterClass
BBC World Service's Digital Planet Catch up with Beatie at COP26
Dezeen Magazine highlights Beatie Wolfe COP26 Projection which visualises rising CO2 levels
Channel 4 Interviews Beatie Wolfe at COP26
Natures Newsroom (official COP26 TV channel) talk with Beatie Wolfe
New York Times Climate Hub, Glasgow, UK - Performance + Keynote
UN Climate Change Summit COP26, Glasgow, UK - Solo Exhibition / From Green to Red
COP26 invited Beatie Wolfe to project her environmental art piece about human impact on the planet, built using 800,000 years of NASA data charting rising CO2 levels, 110ft tall onto Glasgow's iconic Armadillo building. This art piece was previewed at the Nobel Prize Summit where Beatie spoke after David Attenborough and Al Gore. The interactive version was unveiled at the London Design Biennale in Somerset House. This will be the first time the climate art piece has been shown in this form where Wolfe joins Olafur Eliasson, JR and Darren Aronofsky who each takeover the projection.
New York Times invite Nicola Sturgeon, Es Devlin & Beatie Wolfe to open hub
The New York Times Climate Hub opens with First Minister of Scotland Nicola Sturgeon, followed by Beatie Wolfe and Es Devlin
Light and Space by Beatie Wolfe - new Calm track
Quadraphonic Vinyl Album Makes Virtual And Physical Space In Sound
The Boston Globe's "five things to do" - Beatie Wolfe at the Museum of Science
800,000 Years of CO2
Take NASA climate data spanning 800,000 years, combine it with ingenuity and vision, and you get From Green to Red: An Environmental Protest from Beatie Wolfe at the Museum of Science. Observe an interactive visualization of the human impact on Earth at this exclusive viewing of Wolfe’s installation. Free. 7:30 p.m. Register at mos.org.