Ep. 57: Indonesia to Italy: Art unravels climate change - Part 2

Published: Nov. 5, 2020, 12:35 a.m.

10th April 1815: On a remote Indonesian island, a volcano, Mt Tambora, erupted. It was no ordinary eruption - largest in recorded human history and the largest of the Holocene (10,000 years ago to present). It ended up having an enormous impact on the climate of the world. But it also impacted writers, artists and painters in a multitude of ways. One of which is now helping us understand how the future is going to look. In the fourth episode of Our Changing World: Stories of Climate Change, Utsav crisscrosses from Mt. Ijen in Indonesia to Athens in Greece, to uncover a phenomenon which could change how our world actually looks in the future.

To understand more about the intersection of art and travel, check out the following

Ep 5: Art does not have to be boring (https://bit.ly/3mOPVVu)
Ep 13: Beauty of Uzbekistan and the geometry box (https://bit.ly/3ovrcqS)
Ep 15: Vincent Van Gogh and Uzbekistan (https://bit.ly/2TtkCTB)
Ep 56: Indonesia to Italy: Art unravels climate change (https://bit.ly/32cakM6)

Find more travel stories on #PostcardsFromNowhere with Utsav Mamoria.

You can reach out to our host Utsav on Instagram: @whywetravel42
(https://www.instagram.com/whywetravel42)

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