This fall, the MCA and the City of Chicago Department of the Environment presented a one-day symposium to chart the impact of urban life around the globe. Massive Change and the City: Global Visionaries Symposium was an opportunity to meet some of the major changemakers featured in the exhibition
Massive Change: The Future of Global Design. Co-moderated by Bruce Mau, curator of the
Massive Change exhibition, and John Callaway, host of WTTW’s
Friday Night and the Chicago Stories anthology series, the symposium included conversations by global visionaries such as Jimmy Wales, founder of the Wikimedia Foundation, a non-profit corporation that operates Wikipedia; Gregg Easterbrook, senior editor of
The New Republic and author of
The Progress Paradox: How Life Gets Better While People Feel Worse; Dayna Baumeister, cofounder of the Biomimicry Guild; Stewart Brand, futurist and author of the
Whole Earth Catalog,
The Clock of the Long Now, and
How Buildings Learn; Mary Czerwinski, cognitive psychologist and principal researcher at Microsoft; Hazel Henderson, futurist, evolutionary economist, and syndicated columnist; Gunter Pauli, founder and director of Zero Emissions Research Initiative of the United Nations University in Tokyo; and John Todd, biologist and leader in the field of ecological design. Mayor Richard M. Daley presented each speaker with a City of Chicago Global Visionaries Award during the symposium.
The City of Chicago Department of Environment was a co-sponsor of Massive Change’s Visionaries Symposium.
Quicktime video
download PDF October 29, 2006 New York Times pull-out on Massive Change (Chicago edition)