<div dir="ltr"><div>"The streets of <em>Blade Runner</em> and Hong Kong have become more
indistinguishable than ever. The disturbingly wealthy have launched
rockets over streets filled with people in cloth masks raising their
fists and demanding justice, while SWAT teams dispense surveillance
drones and teargas. Smoke is turning the sun red as historic wild fires
rage. Powerful storms lash buildings and flood cities. Elon Musk did our
era no visual favor by introducing a truck whose design suggests cool
and kevlar are becoming one—a style perhaps best described as
“apocalypse flair.”
<p>Iconic game creator Mike Pondsmith is often credited with the
creation of the cyberpunk aesthetic: In 2020, so many people started
calling out the idea his work is coming to life that he issued a
statement reminding people that his aesthetic had been “a warning,” not
something to aspire to.</p>
<p>Indeed, a lot of serious science fiction work aims to scare us away
from less-than-palatable trajectories we might be considering, or have
already embarked on. On <a href="https://scifiagenda.com/">Sci-Fi-Agenda</a>,
a comprehensive curation of science fiction movies with visionary
ambitions, not a single film imagines a world with more beauty than we
have now (or have already left behind).</p>
<p>This, one could argue, is because doomsday scenarios are easier to
paint than realistic utopias. But as 2020 began appearing more and more
like a sixth season of <em>Black Mirror</em>, the creator of the iconic series, Charlie Brooker, <a href="https://www.radiotimes.com/news/on-demand/2020-05-04/black-mirror-6-update/">said he was taking a break</a>
from his fictional dystopias. The need for psychological ease, for
soothing images of impending solace, and, better yet, something concrete
to believe in and strive towards? Well, that need is acute.</p>
<p>Enter an aesthetic and ideological movement known as solarpunk.</p>
<p>Solarpunk is gorgeous by most measures and serves as an umbrella term
for an aesthetic and ideology that emphasizes biomimicry, greenery, and
mind-blowing architectonic structures built to enable sustainability
and self-sufficiency. It’s high-tech <em>art nouveau</em>, if you will.
It’s not the hippie dream of people spending their brief lifetime on
laborious agriculture, it’s agritech and automated farming. It’s not
“back to nature,” but forward into an upgraded, engineered take on “the
natural.”</p>
</div><div><a href="https://singularityhub.com/2020/09/06/solarpunk-is-growing-a-gorgeous-new-world-in-the-cracks-of-the-old-one/">https://singularityhub.com/2020/09/06/solarpunk-is-growing-a-gorgeous-new-world-in-the-cracks-of-the-old-one/</a></div></div>