Water in the Desert 122° F

 
 

Water in the Desert 122°F is a meditation on the past and future of the miles of canals that thread through Phoenix and Tucson, Arizona. The largest pre-Columbian irrigation system in North America, the canals were first engineered 2000 years ago by the ancestral Sonoran Desert people. This Native history was destroyed by the construction of the settler-colonial metropolis. This urban space of asphalt and concrete is ill-prepared for the heat that is coming. The summer now reaches 122°F. At 130°, what happens to the city’s vulnerable people, plants, and animals? Adaptation or abandonment?

 

Body of Water

On’k Akimel (Rio Salado)

Keli Akimel (Gila River) 

Canals of Phoenix, AZ

About the Artist

Meredith Drum is an interdisciplinary artist working with video, animation, installation, and various modes of public participation. Her projects center around the cultivation of care for others, particularly the vulnerable, especially non-human life. Her work is influenced by climate justice, multispecies anthropology, cinema history, cultural studies, intersectional feminism, game studies, science fiction, and contemporary visual culture.