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You can’t miss it or its message.
Aspen Mountain is at 11,212 feet above sea level, the Silver Queen Gondola takes you to the top. You will see a gondola car alongside the Sundeck. This perch is often the most popular spot for tourists mountain top photos. It melts into a pool reddish-purple water as it passes by.
“The Melted Gondola” art installation, conceived by the Aspen Skiing Co. creative team and made by Carbondale-based Chris Erickson, artistThis video aims at jarring skiers and visitors to remind them of the dangers that global warming poses for snow, winter sports, and humanity.
“I would hope that this piece could help move the conversation more towards action, and personal responsibility and corporate responsibility,” Erickson said this week.
By the Skico’s measures, the average temperature here has gone up 3 degrees Fahrenheit since Aspen’s inaugural 1946-47 ski season. According to the company, 30 days of naturally occurring snow have been lost since 1980. The scorched-gondola car is meant for visualization of what lies ahead.
Skico creative director Mark Carolan approached Erickson earlier this year to work on a winter installation, something in the vein of James Dive and The Glue Society’s “Hot with the Chance of a Late Storm,” a 2006 installation in Australia that depicted a melted ice cream truck on a Sydney sidewalk.
Erickson was the natural choice for this job. Erickson rose to prominence as a a Fine artist creating sculptural paintings, including climate-themed series and an outdoor installation at activist artist Ajax Axe’s provocative Aspen Space StationThe mountain’s backside last summer. Prop is his business, which creates custom sculptures and props mostly for private parties.
“It was a perfect, ideal crossroads,” Erickson said. “It’s this convergence of these two disciplines. And the third is the artist activism, this platform that art can provide to make a statement about important societal and cultural issues and challenges.”
His work with miraculous custom props made it clear that he was the local expert for finding the right materials to make a melting snowmobile look like a real melting snowmobile.
The artwork installation was not like the white-glove gallery or museum treatment. Erickson and a Skico team drove the pre-fabricated pieces of “The Melted Gondola” to the top of the mountain on the back of a flatbed truck, then Erickson built a canopy over it with a military parachute and spent four days welding and painting inside of it before the unveiling.
The work is the latest in a year’s-long Push for climate systemic changeFrom the Skico, which included lobbying in Washington and international ad campaigns sounding alarm on climate change, as well as launching a methane capture project in an ex-coal mine. Solo cups have been a part of previous art initiatives. Paula Crown sculpture installationsSkico art advisor and artist, who is also the family owner of the company. They are also partnering up with local environmental groups to complete the multi-year project. “Imagine Climate”Public art project.
The company has been a long-standing partner with the non-profit Protect Our Winters (POW), which focuses on climate action in the snow sports community.
“We are encouraging dialogue, support, and most importantly — through our close connection with POW — strong action,” Carolan said in the company’s “Melted Gondola” announcement.
The dialogue isn’t easy, of course, as COP26 earlier this year in Glasgow and the years of climate summits and inaction by world leaders have shown.
But Erickson has decided to engage in recent weeks after “The Melted Gondola” was unveiled, responding to climate deniers on social media directly and talking about solutions.
Erickson didn’t expect to find himself in this position after completing the piece. He ended up defending Skico before critics. He was skeptical about the company and wondered if they were simply green-washing public relation.
“Working with them was a bit of an ethical dilemma for me,” he explained. “And the more I dug into it, the more I really felt they were looking to make a genuine, heartfelt statement about the crisis. They are taking these steps and initiatives to actually do something about it.”
Even if he’s been met with opposition from some and skepticism from others — along with the obligatory trolling — Erickson is committed to being a part of the conversation his work has started.
“I guess the most encouraging part is people talking about it,” he said. “I think action comes through the conversations.”
The installation of “The Melted Gondola” coincided with the release of the Skico’s Annual sustainability reportThe book, which is this year a manual for climate actions with examples of how POW or Skico are trying to transform the outdoor industry into an active political force on climate change and social justice issues.
“The ski and outdoor industry are enthusiastic, but have not historically wielded large amounts of power the way other industries like oil and gas or big pharma, often do,” Skico vice president of sustainability Auden Schendler said when “The Melted Gondola” was unveiled. “We want to help bring that power to the fight against climate change.”
The report also directly addresses the green-washing concerns, and the often-lobbed criticisms of Skico and Aspen’s climate activism, in a section titled “Hypocrites Unite!”
“The notion that a business like ours that has a large carbon footprint and operates luxury hotels (and where people sometimes, uh, spray champagne on each other) can’t speak out on climate is precisely what the fossil fuel industry wants the public to believe,” it reads, advocating for people not to be silenced because they participate in a fossil fuel economy. “The answer instead is that all of us are obligated to advocate, to lobby, to protest, and to actually implement fixes to the larger system that de-carbonize the whole enchilada. This is terrifying to the folks who created the fossil-based system, which is a good sign.”