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Art in Flux: Transformations Livestream

In collaboration with National Gallery X Curated by Maria Almena, Olive Gingrich and Aphra Shemza.

Date and time

Thu, 22 September 2022
19:30 – 20:35 BST

Location

Online event

About this event

​Speakers: Natasha Trotman & Keynote TBC | Curators & Speakers Art in Flux: Aphra Shemza, Maria Almena & Olive Gingrich | Chair National Gallery X: Ali Hossaini

Performances: Analema Group | Augestine Leudar | Kimatica Studio

During the pandemic media artists provided a silver lining of cultural activity. Post-Covid, the role of technology in society has changed the way we work, communicate, consume and create culture globally. This technological transformation necessitates a reflection on the artists’ role in forging this societal change. How can artists help to ensure that digital resources remain accessible, affordable, ethical, and human-centred? As active agents, visionaries and pioneers of rapidly changing techno-cultures, media artists lead by example through their own practice, frequently identifying public deficits through their art. Through talks, performances and a hybrid exhibition, ‘Art in Flux: Transformations’ spotlights intersections between arts and society.

Over the last 3 years, Art in Flux in collaboration with National Gallery X, led a public discourse on artistic strategies to address societal needs including the need for equal representation, environmental change and wellbeing. By asking important questions around agency, accessibility and the role technology and creativity play, this discourse now culminates in the ‘Transformations’ event at National Gallery X. In this event we come together to reflect on tectonic shifts in society, and how media artists encounter, engender and question such ‘Transformations’. 

Introduced by NGX co-director, Ali Hossaini against the backdrop of the National Gallery’s collection, with presentations by Art in Flux founders Aphra Shemza, Maria Almena and Olive Gingrich, FLUX artist Natasha Trotman and a keynote speaker (TBC), ‘Transformations’ opens a discourse on seismic changes, and how media art practitioners contribute to societal change through their artworks. Three performances by The Analema Group, Magik Door and Kimatica Studio will frame the evening. A hybrid exhibition curated by the Art in Flux team presents artworks by Analema Group, Aphra Shemza, Jake Elwes, Kimatica Studio, Kira Zhigalina, Magik Door, Natasha Trotman, Olive Gingrich, Shama Rahman and Stuart Bacthelor. 

(Top image: Kimatica Studio, Divinations.)

Creating the conditions for other possible worlds to emerge

I wrote a posting for the Artists and Climate Change website on March 15, 2022 called Rise Up, Dissent, and Disassemble, where I suggested that ‘the arts sector has the capacity to shift people’s hearts and minds and will be central to a transformation agenda’ about the ecological crisis. 

I stand by this. 

However, after engaging deeply with Dr. Vanessa Andreotti’s Hospicing Modernity and related publications, and after much reflection and some initial unlearning, I’ve come to the conclusion that any ‘transformation agenda’ led by artists needs to involve rising up, dissenting and disassembling modernity itself (extractive capitalism, colonization, disconnection with nature, systemic racism, etc).

In other words, all of us, together, need to transition out of modernity and ‘create the conditions for other possible worlds to emerge in the wake of what is dying’ as suggested in Preparing for the end of the world as we know it.

It’s that simple. 

Still from video report during Facing Human Wrongs course, Unlearning Bundle Unit 3 – Denial of Unsustainability, July 5, 2022, Duhamel, Québec (photo by Claude Schryer)

It’s actually not simple at all.

How does one de-modernize? 

I’ve started by accepting and embracing de-modernization in my day-to-day life, with its various un-learnings, inter-relations and account-abilities. I am thankful for the guidance and insight from wise and courageous people on this journey from the Gesturing Towards Decolonial Futures collective, Kamea Chayne’s Green Dreamer, Alice Irene Whittaker’s Reseed, Jem Bendell’s Deep Adaptation, Britt Wray’s Gen Dread and many more…

It’s a work-in-progress as I try to ‘hold space for the good, the bad, the ugly and the messed up, within and around’as Dr. Andreotti suggests. 

It involves a lot of listening and humility. 

Still from video report during Facing Human Wrongs course, Unlearning Bundle Unit 3 – Denial of Unsustainability, July 5, 2022, Duhamel, Québec (photo by Claude Schryer)

But wait!

What about my statement that the arts have ‘the capacity to shift people’s hearts and minds and will be central to a transformation agenda’?

They do have this potential, of course, but too many, including myself, are anchored in modernity’s comforts and woven into colonial systems to see the forest for the trees.

While I appreciate and respect any and all efforts to create art that raises environmental awareness and that proposes solutions to the ecological crisis, the artistic activities that interest me the most now are those that directly address the root causes of our destructive behaviour and that contribute to creating the elusive ‘conditions for other possible worlds‘.

Anything else seems like fiddling while Rome burns.

When people ask me if I’m hopeful, I say that no, on the short term, but yes, on the long term. 

That’s enough for now. 

Still from video report during Facing Human Wrongs course, Unlearning Bundle Unit 6, Making New Mistakes, July 25, 2022, Duhamel, Québec (photo by Claude Schryer)

The post Creating the conditions for other possible worlds to emerge appeared first on conscient podcast / balado conscient. conscient is a bilingual blog and podcast (French or English) by audio artist Claude Schryer that explores how arts and culture contribute to environmental awareness and action.

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The Sailing Circus “Ripples” From Norway

The sailing circus performance “Ripples” set sail across the Baltic Sea to inspire people to act for a more sustainable future. Combining performing arts and environmental activism, we set sail for hope, for action and for change.

Trailer: http://www.actingforclimate.com/ripples

“If action triggers action – can our art create a ripple effect for climate action that can spread across the sea?”

The performing arts company Acting for Climate (NO) tours the Baltic Sea in the summer of 2022, in collaboration with Festival Norpas (FI) and Hawila Project (DK). Radically challenging the sustainability standards of the performing arts industry, “Ripples” is toured with the sailing vessel Swallow. The two-masted wooden sail ship from 1926 acts as a stage for the performance, as a home, and as a mean of transport – Ripples is literally fueled by the wind, and the artists sail both day and night between harbors. With extreme acrobatics all the way up to the top of the 20-meter-high masts, the ship acts as a stage for a world-class international team of artists, whose movements are led by a soundscape blending in voices of climate activists from all around the world, Ripples is one of a kind performance!

The seed of Acting for Climate was planted in Norway in 2014, with the dream and the goal of using artistic expression to inspire action for a sustainable future.
“Ripples” is the latest creation of the company, currently strengthening and expanding its network of people, artists and activists that nurture collaboration for sustainability. 

Their first sailing performance, Into the Water, was among other featured in National Geographics, and reached thousands of audiences in the harbors and millions online.

“As artists we have the opportunity and responsibility to inspire action, joy and change” – Emma Langmoen, artist.

The performance “Ripples” is directed by Hanne Friis, for whom the project combines high quality performing arts with a real action against the climate crisis. Seven artists alternate contemporary circus, physical theatre, dance, music and storytelling to convey a narrative of hope. Played site-specific on the boat, “Ripples” is an absorbing performance whose aim is to engage minds while entertaining eyes.

The performance is a voyage into the future, into the hopes of a new generation who feels truly connected to nature and to what being an artist means. Artistic expression is a powerful tool to empower society, to embody ecological grief and hope for the future within the ship’s magnificent framework.

“Ripples” reaches out to people and creates space to reflect. In fact, the performance is combined with workshops, approaching artistic communities and local audiences in all the countries where Swallow will dock.

Acting for Climate questions the values of our society, inspiring curiosity and discussions, embodies the change that can be achieved in society, starting with sustainable touring.

“We challenge our times, inspiring people to act towards climate change, to reflect on how humanity treats nature. Let us sail around and enter the harbors and hearts of people” – Hanne Friis, Ripples’ artistic director.

Ripples Artistic Director: Hanne Trap Friis

Starring: Abigael Rydtun Winsvold, Emma Langmoen, Heidi Miikki, Lucie Piot, Ole Skovgård Dampe, Marie Binda, Max Behrendt

Project leaders: Abigael Winsvold & Emma Langmoen

In collaboration with Hawila Project & Festival Norpas

PR & Communications: Federica Parise

Produced by: Acting for Climate & Festival Norpas

Producers Team : Federica Parise, Ronja Tammenpää, Irina Pleva, Ania Lewandowska, Isabella de Judicibus

Music by Annelie Nederberg
Costumes by Michiel Tange van Leeuwen
Rigging design by Matt Horton

The project is funded by the European Union | Erasmus + programme, KONE Foundation, Nordic Culture Point and the Norwegian Culture Fund. The project is supported by Sharing Copenhagen.

Tour Plan

15.07 – 17.07 Performing in Holbaek – Denmark | with Hawila Project
04.08 – 07.08 Performing in Taalintehdas – Finland | with Festival Norpas
11.08 – 13.08 Performing in Helsinki- Finland | with Dance Theatre Hurjaruuth
20.08 – 21.08 Performing in Saaremaa – Estonia | with Big Wolf Company & the Estonian Contemporary Circus Development Centre
02.09 – 04.09 Performing in Copenhagen – Denmark | in collaboration with Ofelia Plads
11.09 – 14.09 Performing in Norway | with Nøtterøy Kulturhus

Performance length: about 70min


Contacts for interviews and more information

Acting for Climate
E-post: actingforclimate@gmail.com

Artistic team:
+4792296862 (Abigael Winsvold) or +4792811085 (Emma Langmoen)

Tour manager Isabella de Judicibus: +39 349 624 5226

Website: http://www.actingforclimate.com
Instagram: @actingforclimate Facebook: @actingforclimate

Sensoria 2022: the Art & Science of Our Senses

SENSORIA: the Art & Science of Our Senses is a multi-site exhibition and symposium that bridges LAZNIA Centre for Contemporary Art (LCCA) in Gdansk, Poland and Sensorium: Centre for Digital Arts & Technology at York University in Toronto, Canada. Held simultaneously in both locations, the exhibition and symposium will engage multi-sensory research that revitalizes our sensory connections to our surroundings, through and despite technological tools, networks and latencies.

The exhibition is co-curated by distinguished curator Nina Czegledy (Agents for Change: Facing the Anthropocene, 2020 & Leonardo/ ISAST 50th Celebrations, 2018) and Sensorium director Joel Ong.  Czegledy brings together an international network of artists and scholars who explore the intersection of art, science and the senses in the project that she has meticulously developed over multiple years.  Sited concurrently in both Poland and Toronto, the Sensoria exhibition will explore the dissociative potential of contemporary technologies on the senses, treating it not only as a social crisis but also an opportunity for creative play and experimentation. It aims to engage a conversation about the senses from the perspective of art, but also science, incorporating artists that straddle the boundaries of knowledge production in a variety of ways.

The symposium leverages the exhibition content as the starting point for more in-depth conversation about the connective aesthetics of everyday sensing and the knowledge-creation potential of artists and scientists collaborating in innovative ways. The socio-political turbulences we have experienced worldwide during the last decade have created unprecedented social and personal strife. While connections are sustained now amongst virtual networks that straddle vast spaces, how might we consider the sharing of intimate senses through smell, touch, and bodily movement as a form of mutual support? The symposium explores questions such as these with keynote presentations by Ryszard Khuszcynski, Chris Salter and David Howse, as well as roundtables between artists and scientists, and performances by Csenge Kolozsvari and York University’s DisPerSions Lab (led by Doug Van Nort). All aspects of the symposium will be presented with virtual components, so as to allow both in-person engagement in Toronto and virtual presence in Gdansk and elsewhere.

The SENSORIA exhibition will run:

LAZNIA CCA : Sept 16th – Oct 30th 2022
Gales Gallery, York University Toronto : Sept 26th – Oct 14th 2022

The symposium will be held in person at York University, and streamed online on Oct 4-5th 2022

In addition, the exhibition and exhibiting artists will be open to the public during Nuit Blanche on Oct 1 2022.

Sensoria’s Toronto edition is programmed by Sensorium: Centre for Digital Arts and Technology (Sensorium) at the School of the Arts, Media, Performance & Design (AMPD) as part of the Year of the Arts Program


Artists

Guy van Belle, Roberta Buiani, Lorella Di Cintio and Kavi, Grace Grothaus, Hrysovalanti Maheras, Agnes Meyer-Brandis, Gayil Nalls, Michael Palumbo, Michaela Pnacekova, Raewyn Turner & Brian Harris.

We Make Tomorrow 2022

We Make Tomorrow summit 2020 video. For the audio-described version, please watch here.

The buzz is building for the return of our action-focused one-day summit We Make Tomorrow on October 13th in Birmingham. Sliding scale tickets for both in person and online attendance are on sale now (including complimentary and concession rates) and we share our first speaker and programme preview below. 


What To Expect
Credit: An excerpt from Zadie Xa’s artwork ‘Ancestral undulations and the transmission of knowing’, previewed at We Make Tomorrow 2020

We Make Tomorrow 2022 is Julie’s Bicycle’s biggest event, inviting people to connect with the projects, individuals, and ideas that are making change and leading on creative climate action.

25+ cross-cultural speakers: 
>>  
An intersectional line-up of inspiring speakers and contributors, including artists, activists, cultural commentators, scientists, policymakers, producers, curators, writers and communicators.

Visual arts interventions: 
>> Discover artists exploring the relationships between art, social justice, imagination and liberation from the creatives at MAIA.

Musical performances: 
>> Woven together with lively performances from talented musicians via cross-cultural folksters Nest Collective.

Intimate workshops: 
>>  Put your learning into action with workshops on personal resilience and wellbeing, and creating sustainable doughnut cities

Inspiration on Creative Climate Leadership: 
>> Meeting courageous individuals reimagining the possibilities for a fairer future.

Community & connection: 
>>  Plenty of space for discussion, networking and reflection with others working towards Creative Climate Action, with delicious vegetarian and vegan sustenance provided during break times.

A 600-strong community of participants: 
>>  300 joining us in person and 300 participating online to discover, question, and gather hope together. 

Changemakers retreat space: 
>>  A dedicated oasis of calm hosted by our friends at Craftivist Collective, with 6 action stations to reflect, digest and get creative throughout the day.


Exploring Climate Justice
Photo Civic Square’s Co-Creation Week

The We Make Tomorrow 2022 programme will include sessions on the following topics:

We need one another

What is needed now? A conversation about leading climate action with care, honesty, and respect.

Making justice work

What can be learnt from those who’ve stepped up against the odds to take action on climate, changing the conditions around them?

Funding climate justice

Does financial decision-making reflect values that integrate justice? Exploring principles and frameworks for funding climate justice in our work.

Our place in the world

Learning from local placemaking that tackles creative climate action, leveraging our role as cultural catalysts in local climate policy and civic activism: when to step up and when to step aside?

We don’t care when your net zero target is!

How do we challenge the ‘net zero’ tag without losing the critical 1.5 degrees limit on warming? What imaginative responses might culture make to reach net zero locally, nationally and globally?

Adaptation and upheavals

How can cultural organisations respond to social and physical upheavals, adapt, thrive and build resilience to climate impacts?

Seeing the big picture: creative climate justice

How do we practice solidarity and connect injustices to build equitable, healthy, and regenerative systems for our planet, here and internationally?

Making space for wellbeing

What does personal resilience mean, and what makes a caring, healthy environment in which we can thrive?

A legacy that matters

Creating legacies now: which frameworks and relationships can support ongoing change?

The full programme will be announced soon. 


Meet Our Contributors
Speakers include:

Ahdaf Soueif, novelist and political and cultural commentator

Alistair Gentryartist, activist and researcher

Amahra Spence, Co-Founder and Creative Director, MAIA

Cecilia Vicuna, poet, artist, filmmaker and activist

Emma Blake Morsi, Multi-Disciplinary Producer, and Director of Rising Arts Agency

Eric Njugunayouth climate justice and human rights organizer

Fehinti Balogunactor and writer

Feimatta ContehEnvironmental Sustainability Manager, Manchester International Festival

Gillian Burkebiologist, presenter, public speaker, and writer

Harpreet Kaur Paul, researcher and lawyer

Helen Starrworld-building curator

Ian Solomon KawallCEO of May Project Gardens

Immy KaurCo-Founder and Director, CIVIC SQUARE

Islam Elbeitimusician, cultural curator and radio presenter

Janet VaughanCo-Artistic Director of Talking Birds

Jessica SimCo-Founder of Nadas Istanbul

Lou Byng, Creative Director, CIVIC SQUARE

Magid Magidrace and climate justice activist and author

Nathan Thankihuman ecologist and writer

Noga Levy-Rapoportyouth climate activist, organiser, and speaker

Nonhlanhla MakuyanaCo-Founder of Decolonising Economics

Pravali VangetiWorld Heritage Education Programme Coordinator, UNESCO World Heritage Centre

Raj Palcurator/historian and activist

Saleemul HuqDirector, International Centre for Climate Change and Development

Zahra Davidson, Chief Exec and Design Director, Huddlecraft

…and more!

Further speakers and performers will be announced in the coming weeks. Full speaker bios can be found on this page.


Friends of We Make Tomorrow include:

Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery 
The Climate Heritage Network
Culture Declares Emergency 
The Happy Museum 
LIVE Green 
May Project Gardens
Music Declares Emergency
The National Museum Directors’ Council
The Theatre Green Book 


With warm thanks to our supporters and sponsors for this event:

This event is run in partnership with Arts Council England as part of the environmental sustainability programme.

Good Energy is a pioneering, clean energy company whose purpose is to power the choice of a cleaner, greener future for everyone. Its mission is to help one million homes and businesses cut their carbon by 2025. It supplies customers with electricity from a community of over 1700 renewable generators, helps tens of thousands more generate their own clean power and is accelerating clean transport too. The company has a long history of working with the arts and cultural sector.

Sustainable Wine Solutions began its journey in 2002 as Borough Wines with its refillable wine on tap concept. Today Sustainable Wine Solutions are the true champions of sustainability within the drinks industry, with their fully circular business model supplying zero waste wines with UK’s only refill Kegs and the first Bottle Return Scheme, directly invested in tackling packaging and transport of wine (the biggest source of emissions in the wine industry), plus working with sustainably led winemakers.

IFACCA – Mondiacult 2022 Open Mic

Calling artists, cultural professionals, arts organisations, networks, academia and all who care about the future of arts and culture – contribute to a global cultural policy dialogue and share your reflections on:

  • one issue of most urgent concern on the sustainability and resilience of the arts, culture, heritage and creativity
  • one action policymakers should take to effect positive change in this area
  • a possible solution that already addresses this concern.

Send your responses via video or in writing through:

WhatsApp, Google Forms, or Twitter

Submissions close 21 August 2022 (11.59pm Mexico City time; check your local time here).

Please share this call widely with your networks. The more voices from around the world, the better.

For more information, see the Share Your Voice – Virtual Global Open Mic website.

Please note that submissions may be shared publicly by Open Mic partner organisations.

Share Your Voice for MONDIACULT 2022: Virtual Global Open Mic is delivered by the Ministry of Culture of the Government of Mexico, IFACCA, the Tijuana Cultural Center (CECUT), the North American Cultural Diplomacy Initiative (NACDI), the Universidad Panamericana (Mexico) and the Universidad Iberoamericana (Mexico).

Submissions to the Open Mic will strengthen the dialogue amongst Ministers of Culture from around the world at MONDIACULT 2022 by sharing the civil society perspectives crucial for shaping balanced, inclusive and relevant cultural policies.

At the initiative of the Ministry of Culture, Mexico will host the UNESCO World Conference on Cultural Policies and Sustainable Development – MONDIACULT 2022, to be held from 28 to 30 September 2022 in Mexico City. The aim is to rethink cultural policies and to address global challenges and outline immediate and future priorities, and will be attended by the governments of the 193 Member States and Associate Members of UNESCO; Non-Member States and Observers; organisations of the United Nations system; intergovernmental organisations and international non-governmental organisations. MONDIACULT 2022 also opens a space for creative communities and the public at large to express ideas, concerns, interests, and contributions related to culture and cultural policies at the global level, through an open and inclusive model.


Llamando a artistas, profesionales de la cultura, organizaciones culturales, redes, académicos y toda persona que se preocupa por el futuro de las artes y la cultura: contribuya a un diálogo mundial sobre políticas culturales y comparta sus reflexiones acerca de:

  • un tema de mayor preocupación sobre a la sostenibilidad y resiliencia de las artes, la cultura, el patrimonio y la creatividad 
  • una acción o medida que deberían adoptar los(as) responsables de políticas públicas para lograr un cambio positivo
  • una posible solución que ya aborda esta preocupación.

Send your responses via video or in writing through:

WhatsApp, Google Forms, o Twitter

Se reciben contribuciones hasta las 23:59 del 21 de agosto de 2022 (hora de Ciudad de México; verifique su hora local aquí).

Por favor, comparta esta convocatoria ampliamente con sus redes. Cuantas más voces de todo el mundo, mejor.

Para mayor información diríjase a: Comparte Tu Voz para MONDIACULT 2022: Micrófono Abierto Global Virtual

Por favor, tenga en cuenta que las organizaciones asociadas a Open Mic podran compartir públicamente las presentaciones.

Comparte Tu Voz para MONDIACULT 2022: Micrófono Abierto Global Virtual es un evento organizado por la Secretaría de Cultura del Gobierno de México, IFACCA, el Centro Cultural de Tijuana (CECUT), la Iniciativa de Diplomacia Cultural de América del Norte (NACDI), la Universidad Panamericana (México) y la Universidad Iberoamericana (México). 

Estas contribuciones fortalecerán el diálogo entre los(as) ministros(as) de cultura de todo el mundo en MONDIACULT 2022 al compartir las perspectivas de la sociedad civil, cruciales para dar forma a políticas culturales equilibradas, inclusivas y relevantes.

Por iniciativa de la Secretaría de Cultura, México albergará la Conferencia Mundial de la UNESCO sobre Políticas Culturales y Desarrollo Sostenible – MONDIACULT 2022, a celebrarse del 28 al 30 de septiembre de 2022 en la Ciudad de México. El objetivo es realizar una nueva reflexión sobre las políticas culturales y hacer frente a los desafíos globales y perfilar las prioridades inmediatas y futuras que contará con la participación de los gobiernos de los 193 Estados Miembros y Miembros Asociados de la UNESCO; Estados No Miembros y Observadores; organizaciones del sistema de las Naciones Unidas; organizaciones intergubernamentales y organizaciones internacionales no gubernamentales. MONDIACULT 2022, asimismo, abre un espacio para las comunidades creativas y la ciudadanía en general para expresar ideas, inquietudes, intereses y aportaciones relacionadas con la cultura y las políticas culturales a nivel global, a través de un modelo abierto e inclusivo.

APASQ – And After/Et Après Conversations at World Stage Design 2022


These 10:00 am conversations during World Stage Design 2022 are a part of APASQ’s continuing exhibition recording industry professionals at international conferences. On the days of the recordings these conversations will be presented at World Stage Design (WSD) as a Cvent. There will also include bonus information at the end of the interviews informing WSD participants about select Ecoscenography events that will be taking place on that given day.

You can watch it live and chat here: https://vimeo.com/event/2339485 or return to this page daily for that day’s conversation.

Conversation Schedule

August 8August 9August 10August 11August 12
QuébecMarianne LavoieMarie-Renée Bourget HarveyPatrice Charbonneau BrunelleÉmilie RacineLinda Brunel
InternationalTanja BeerMona KastellVespa LaineJanis HartIngvill Fossheim

Canada 2022: Creative Climate Leadership Participants Announced

About CCL Canada

We are incredibly excited to announce the first ever cohort of Creative Climate Leadership Canada participants!

The CSPA has partnered with Julie’s Bicycle (JB) to host for the first time in Canada the Creative Climate Leadership (CCL) program, with the support of the Canada Council for the Arts. Since 2017, JB along with multiple partners have been offering intensive training opportunities to creative leaders from the arts and culture sector to deepen their understanding and commitment to climate justice and the ecological crisis. The immersive course will take place at the Barrier Lake Field Station in Kananaskis, Alberta area adjacent to Banff National Park on the traditional territory of the Stoney Nakoda in the foothill of the Rockies, from August 1st to 5th, and is open to artists, curators, creative and cultural professionals and policy-makers that work and live across Canada. This CCL will be delivered in English.

CCL Canada, hosted near Banff, Alberta, will offer training for 24 individuals. Participants will learn, discuss and reflect on the topics of the climate crisis, climate justice, resilience and wellbeing, climate communication, and creative leadership for climate action, and will develop personal and professional tools and strategies to bring climate and ecological action to the center of their practices and organizations. The five-day intensive course enables participants to apply environmental frameworks and targets meaningfully to their work, and explore what leadership means in the context of a rapidly changing world.

Meet the Participants

Alain Monast

Following his musical studies, Alain Monast was a professional musician for ten years before devoting himself to the management of organisations in music, dance and theatre. He has been involved at all levels of production and has provided administrative management for organisations of all sizes. Since 1998, he has held several interim positions as Program Officer at the Canada Council for the Arts. He is currently a Program Officer for 2 programs : Arts Across Canada and Arts Abroad.

Anne-Catherine Lebeau

I have been active on the cultural scene in Montreal for the last 30 years. I first trained as an actress at the Moscow Art Theater School, I also translated a dozen plays from Russian to French and worked as an assistant director and a director. I completed a masters’ degree in Cultural Management at HEC Montreal in 2019 just before I cofounded Ecosceno, a social enterprise aiming to support the cultural sector in the socioecological transition. I have been the executive director since the beginning.

“Since I started my quest to understand what could be done differently in the cultural sector to waste less materials and take into consideration the climate crisis we are experiencing, I have been very inspired and impressed by all the work Julie’s bicycle has done in this area in the last 10 years. I am very eager to take part in a workshop designed by this organization.”

Ben Finley

Ben Finley is a collaborative performer-composer specializing in acoustic and electric bass. He grew up on a music festival farm (Westben), where he witnessed/fell in love with various ways of making music. Ben is the Creative Director of the Performer-Composer Residency and the Sustainability Coordinator at Westben. He is a current Ph.D. candidate in the Critical Studies in Improvisation program at the University of Guelph, studying music festivals/creative music practices as sites of eco-cultural regeneration.

“I want to build lasting relationships from this experience and contribute to a support system to continue sharing insights, creating inspiration to continue our local/community work, and open ourselves into our own gaps, vulnerabilities, and personal grasping with these issues.”

Brighid Fry

Brighid Fry is a 19 year old musician and one half of the award winning duo Housewife (formerly Moscow Apartment). With her band and as a solo artist, Brighid has released 3 EPS and several singles. Housewife signed in 2021 and asked for a climate clause to be included. Believing in the power of music to promote the cultural change needed to create a better future, in 2021, Brighid helped to launch the Canadian chapter of Music Declares Emergency.

I am applying for this program because I believe that artists have enormous power to affect social & political change. I want to see more musicians using that power and their platforms to call attention to the climate emergency and to help get people mobilized to push for meaningful action.”

Christine Brubaker

I am a theatre director & dramaturge. My focus is new plays/adaptations – often site-specific, based on true stories. I look for connections with histories, both personal & collective. Recent works: HenryG20, an adaptation of Shakespeare’s Henry V set in the G20 protests & Rella’s Cambrian Dream, a science-based piece for family audiences about the earliest forms of life on earth. I am the Division Lead in Drama at UCalgary & my research investigates the interaction of live & digital performance over mobile technology.

“I want to stretch, think differently & ideally bring back new energy not just in my role as Division Lead, but to my own practice. I want to harness and contribute to current actions of others to advance an ethical climate strategy for now, my own life-span and for the future.”

David Campion

I work with writer Sandra Shields on photo-text installations around power and its blind spots including 3 books (BC Book Prize 2003). In public galleries we have made a practice of appropriating pop forms as a means of sharing uncomfortable knowledge. Our last project, touring show Grand Theft Terra Firma (BC Museums Award 2018), tackles our own responsibility as settlers using digital gaming to reframe the settlement of Canada as a nefarious heist and challenge the moral authority of the colonial narrative.

Donna Grantis

Donna Grantis is a Canadian artist, guitarist, composer and producer. From 2012 to 2016 Grantis performed and recorded with Prince as a member of his funk-rock trio 3RDEYEGIRL, and supergroup New Power Generation. She was named one of the greatest female guitarists of all time by Guitar Player Magazine. As a bandleader and eOne recording artist, Grantis fronted a 5-piece electric jazz quintet. Her album, DIAMONDS & DYNAMITE, reached #1 on iTunes Canada (Jazz) in 2019. “Donna Grantis was born to play guitar.” – CBC Radio

“The mandate of Julie’s Bicycle – to mobilize the arts and culture to take action on the climate crisis – is so inspiring and exciting to me. It reflects the exact intersection I am passionate about exploring in my own work.”

Eriel Tchekwie Deranger

Deranger is a member of Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation and Executive Director of Indigenous Climate Action. Deranger works with the International Indigenous Peoples Forum on Climate Change, It Takes Roots, Climate Justice Resiliency Fund Council of Advisors and Chair of Bioneers. She has written for the Guardian, Yellowhead Institute, The National Observer, Red Pepper Magazine; featured in documentary films including Elemental (2012); is regularly interviewed for media outlets Democracy Now!, APTN, and CBC.

“We are forging paths for ourselves and our kin, we are holding self-determination and sovereignty at the centre and inviting change. Climate Justice demands more than protest or reduction of GHGs, it requires liberation from the root causes of planetary injustices – from colonialism, extractivism, capitalism, patriarchy and white supremacy.”

Fanny-Pierre Galarneau

Fanny is a visual artist, muralist and social innovator fascinated by collective intelligence. Her practices have been centered around developing artistic participatory methods around the protection of living heritage, biodiversity, water and climate justice. Her passion has led her throughout Brazil, Chile, Guatemala, and in knowledge-rich and creative northern and Indigenous territories. Fanny also works at the One Drop Foundation as a Social Art Specialist on safe water Programs. She is also co-developing a new philanthropy Youth initiative around Water and climate in Canada.

“Climate justice for me is an important act of colonial reparation. I want to develop my capacity of leadership and create strong connections and relationships”

Glenne Campbell

Glenne‘s creative work as a costume designer has included a wide range of motion picture projects and costumed personalities. Her work has spanned the universe portraying sci fi, contemporary, western, comedy, fantasy, and historical storytelling. She has worked internationally. Additional creative pursuits include drawing, painting, landscaping, travel, cultural community participation & sustainability stewardship. Her grandparents, the first gatekeepers at Jasper National Park in 1930’s, set an example.

“I need to learn the current language of climate change and environment challenge so that I may speak to it effectively. I need to learn techniques for how to support, educate and engage more people. . . While costuming tries to be green, it is in fact a consumptive art form which needs leadership to establish ways to reuse, reduce, recycle. I would engage with costumers globally.” 

Jessie Demers

Jessie Demers is a community organizer, curator and arts administrator living on Lekwungen territory in Victoria BC. She has worked in the arts sector since 2006, including 5 years as Curator and Education Programmer at Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History, and 6 years as an Arts Programmer for the District of Saanich. She has been involved in environmental activism since she was teenager when participated in old growth logging blockades in Clayoquot Sound and Walbran Valley. Demers recently curated the Eden Grove Artist in Residence Program and the exhibition Still Standing: Ancient Forest Futures at UVic’s Legacy Gallery, featuring twelve artists including Kelly Richardson, Paul Walde and Carey Newman. Demers holds a BFA from NSCAD University and a BEd from UBC Vancouver.

I see hope as a verb, and action as the antidote to despair. I believe art plays a vital role in imagining new futures and moving people from paralysis into action. As an activist and an arts worker, I am driven to harness the power of hope and creativity for positive, collective transformation.

Judi Pearl

Judi Pearl is Associate Producer for English Theatre at the National Arts Centre and a co-founder of SCALE – Sectoral Climate Arts Leadership for the Emergency – which works to mobilize Canada’s arts and culture sector around the climate emergency. She also currently serves on the board of The Only Animal and previously served for ten years on the board of the Professional Association of Canadian Theatres. She is grateful to live and work on unceded Algonquin Anishinaabe territory.

“I hope to develop a deeper and more nuanced appreciation for how art and artists can shift underlying values towards a more regenerative future, away from extractivism and consumerism. I believe the answers go beyond the aestheticization of science, but we have yet to understand what this really means for artistic practice.”

Julia Matamoros

Julia Matamoros is a cultural worker and facilitator. She believes the arts can and must play a bigger role in climate action. Her work in education and sector-wide initiatives has focused on equity, diversity and inclusion, as Education Manager at the Gardiner Museum and as Partnerships Officer at the Institute for Canadian Citizenship, where she worked with a national network of cultural organizations and new citizens to build inclusion through research, resources and a mobile app. More recently, as Associate with Garrow&Evoy, Julia coached non-profit organisations through strategic and social impact clarity.

“The alarming speed at which the climate emergency continues to escalate leaves no room to be passive. I feel the urge to be part of the solution and believe that arts and culture, a sector I know well, holds immense potential.”

Katherine Carleton

I’ve been Executive Director of Orchestras Canada/Orchestres Canada (the national association for Canadian orchestras) since 2005, and have also worked as a clarinetist, teacher, granting officer at a public funding agency, and orchestra manager. I’m an arts advocate and leader in collaborative initiatives among arts service organizations, and was appointed to the Order of Canada in 2016.

“I love orchestras, yet I acknowledge that the markers of success in the orchestral field often require an outsized consumption of carbon, be it the construction of a new concert hall, a European tour, or programs that feature internationally celebrated soloists. I yearn for collective, creative responses from our sector, I seek ways to connect personal engagement with organizational decision-making, and I want to be part of re-conceptualizing just what success looks like.”

Katrine Claassens

Katrine Claassens is an artist and environmental policy communications specialist. Her paintings and videos reflect her interests in climate change, urban ecology, and internet memes. From the Arctic to Antarctica, she has presented research, led workshops, exhibited, and worked with scientists, students, and government stakeholders on the environmental challenges of the Anthropocene. In addition to her practice as an artist, she has worked with governments, universities, and think tanks in environmental and public policy communications. Katrine holds an honours degree in Visual Art and a master’s degree in Climate Change and Development.

“I have followed Julie’s Bicycle’s activities for years, and was extremely excited to see this opportunity to learn and connect with other climate creatives here in Canada.”

Luisa Ji

Luisa Ji (M.ARCH 2015, Permaculture Design Certificate 2021) is a multi-disciplinary creative, designer, and strategist. She believes individuals need to take up space as they experience art and author their own stories through art, rather than viewing artworks from a distance. Luisa is the studio lead at UKAI Projects, stewarding arts programs and co-production projects prioritizing polyphony. She is a co-founder of Nomadic Labs, a digital studio amplifying the works of social impact organizations.

“I want to explore opportunities where the arts and cultural production can provide an alternative by inviting broad and diverse audiences into immersive experiences that amplify climate narratives from those who have been impacted by environmental injustices disproportionately rather than only institutional or official narratives. I would like to collaborate and be in dialogue with people who are exploring similar approaches during this program.”

Marissa McHugh

Marissa McHugh is a Program Office at the Canada Council for the Arts, where she currently works in sector innovation and development. She has a BFA in Theatre Performance from the University of Regina, where she studied acting for stage and film. During her MA in Drama and Literature at the University of Guelph, she developed her dramaturgical and directing skills. She then taught theatre at Ridley College before obtaining her PhD in English Literature. She has presented her research in Canada and abroad and worked at various arts organizations in the Ottawa region. She is originally from Saskatchewan, but has made Gatineau, Quebec her home.

Michelle Tracey

Michelle Tracey is a scenographer based in Toronto, Ontario working in the fields of theatre, opera, tv, film and events in between. She specialises in set and costume design but she also enjoys working with lighting and projections. Michelle earned her BFA from York University in Theatre Production and Design, and she is a graduate of the Soulpepper Academy where she practised dramaturgical scenography under the mentorship of Lorenzo Savoini. Michelle is also a trained wardrobe technician and has constructed costumes for numerous professional productions. Her upcoming design work can be seen onstsage at The Stratford Festival in Every Little Nookie, and at Crow’s Theatre in Anthropic Traces. Michelle is a founding member of Triga Creative, a collective of designers committed to ecoscenography, intergenerational artistic exchange and the development of new sustainable working models. Her passion for scenography is rooted in its potential to spark imagination, to transform and transcend. She believes that collective experience has the power to inspire people to see new ways of being, to connect with one another and maybe even change the world.

“I feel an increasing responsibility to gain expertise around climate justice, and how to use my gifts as an artist to inspire change.  I hope to connect with other creative leaders to collaborate on artistic projects that evoke passionate responses towards climate action. I hope to build up an industry that can put shared values into action through climate-conscious programming, design and producing.”

Shammah Salwa 

Shammah Salwa is a multidisciplinary artist practising digital photography, photojournalism and documentary cinematography. She lives and works in Toronto with a special focus on the region of Scarborough and North York. Her work is influenced by my ancestral origins from Bangladesh exploring themes of nostalgia, migration narratives and the hyphenated identity. These themes tie into various topics within environmental justice movements such as food in/security, urban agriculture and indigenous land sovereignty.

“I hope to find a collective where participants from diverse creative mediums can collaborate on practical and radical approaches to tackling apathy and ignorance around climate change.”

Shawn Newman

Shawn is the Research & Impact Manager at Toronto Arts Council and Toronto Arts Foundation. In this role, he is responsible for overseeing the evaluation of TAC grants programs and Foundation initiatives and initiating collaborative research projects that support the arts and culture sectors through bridging academia and industry. Having had an international career as a dancer and choreographer, and described as “[one] of Toronto’s finest dancers” (Paula Citron, Toronto Life), Shawn then completed his PhD in Cultural Studies at Queen’s University. He has taught in the Department of Gender Studies and the Department of Film and Media at Queen’s as well as the Department of Dance at York University. His research spans many artistic disciplines while focusing on representation and power in and through critical race, critical disability, and gender studies.

“What I hope to get out of the CCL program are tools and resources to begin to understand how funding agencies can incorporate a climate focus into their grant assessment processes and policies. I also am keen to connect with a network of people addressing climate change, and to forge opportunities for further collaboration and partnership.”

Taiwo Afolabi

Taiwo holds the Canada Research Chair in Socially Engaged Theatre and serve as the Director for the Centre for Socially Engaged Theatre at the University of Regina. He is an artist-scholar in applied theatre who has worked in over a dozen countries across four continents in variety of context. Through storytelling and devised theatre, he works with communities on issues pertinent to them from issues of immigration to climate justice among others.

“As a Black artist-scholar, I would like to explore creative climate leadership from the lens of decentralization and decolonization. While I listen deeply and learn from others, I would like to share ways place-based perspectives and practice can shape climate and ecological crisis with impact, creativity, and resilience.”

Tracey Friesen

Tracey has over 30 years experience in Canada’s cultural sector. In the decade before joining the Canadian Media Producers Association in 2020, she worked at the David Suzuki Foundation & Roundhouse Radio plus authored ‘Story Money Impact: Funding Media for Social Change‘, which led to the founding of a charitable organization under the same name. Tracey spent nearly 12 years at the National Film Board in Vancouver, where she earned producer or executive credits on dozens of projects.

“I’d value the opportunity to forge deep (in-person!) connections with a wider range of new (to me) people who share my concern for our precious world, and my conviction that art and story can impact hearts and minds, leading to impactful behaviour change.”

(Photo credit: Creative Climate Leadership training course participants in Slovenia, photo by Karim Shalaby)

Venice Biennale Eco-Art Review 2022

Thursday, July 21

United States: 10:00am PT, 11:00am MT, 12:00pm CT, 1:00pm ET

EUROPE: 17:00 GMT  Australia: 4am AEDT, Thursday

Khaled Ramadan and more speakers to be confirmed soon!

This will be an incredible gathering of curators from this year’s Venice Biennale who are engaged with artists and current discourse on how art can play a role in decolonizing nature. As well as, members who have attended the Biennale that will act as respondents. It is an opportunity to understand the changing roles of art and representation of artists at the most prestigious international art event on the planet.

Gif above: Anders Sunna, Illegal Spirits of Sápmi, at The Sámi Pavilion, Giardini, Photo: Patricia Watts; Pera + Fora + Fauna, collateral event, installation shot at Archivi della Misericorida; Turba Tol Hol-Hol Tolat the Chile Pavilion, Arsenale, Photo: Patricia Watts; Independent exhibition Planet B: Climate Change & the New Sublime, installation shot at Palazzo Bollani organized by French curatorial cooperative, Radicants, including Nicolas Bourriaud, Photo: Patricia Watts; The Soul Expanding Ocean #4, Diana Policarpo, Ocean Space, at Chiesa di San Lorenzo.  

Members and one guest are free. General Public can attend for $10. All participants MUST REGISTER. Members please consider making a donation.

REGISTER

Eco-anxiety workshop with / Atelier sur l’éco-anxiété avec: Wendy Greenspun

A conversation with a climate psychologist / Une conversation avec une psychologue spécialiste du changement climatique

Mon, 18 July 2022
3:00 PM – 4:30 PM EDT

REGISTER HERE

About this event

Despair, anxiety, frustration and sadness are some of the feelings that might arise from the fights against the ecological crisis and the social injustices of our times. Join us for a conversation with climate psychologist Wendy Greenspun centred on emotional sustainability and eco-anxiety. Wendy will take us through these themes and will open up space for folks to share their feelings and thoughts. 

Le désespoir, l’anxiété, la frustration et la tristesse sont quelques-uns des sentiments qui peuvent naître des luttes contre la crise écologique et les injustices sociales de notre époque. Rejoignez-nous pour une conversation avec Wendy Greenspun, psychologue spécialiste du changement climatique, centrée sur la durabilité émotionnelle et l’éco-anxiété. Wendy nous emmènera à travers ces thèmes et ouvrira l’espace pour que les gens puissent partager leurs sentiments et leurs pensées.

There will be live English to French translation throughout and additional accessibility support will be provided upon request. A zoom link will be sent to registrants closer to the event. 

La traduction simultanée de l’anglais vers le français sera disponible tout au long de l’événement. Il nous fera plaisir de vous offrir un soutien supplémentaire sur demande pour assurer l’accessibilité de l’événement. N’hésitez pas à nous contacter à cet effet. Un lien de connexion Zoom vous sera transmis par courriel à l’approche de l’événement. 

This event is made possible by the support of the Department of Canadian Heritage and the Canada Council for the Arts. 

Cet événement est rendu possible grâce à l’appui de Patrimoine Canada et du Conseil des arts du Canada. 

Wendy Greenspun, PhD, is a clinical psychologist and psychoanalyst and serves on the steering committee and board of the Climate Psychology Alliance- North America. She is on faculty at the Manhattan Institute for Psychoanalysis, the Adelphi University Postgraduate Program in Marriage and Couples Therapy and the William Alanson White Couple Therapy Training and Education Program. She has presented papers, workshops, and courses nationally and internationally for mental health professionals on ways to work with climate distress and grief. She also provides workshops on building emotional resilience for climate activists, high school, and university students. She has run group forums (climate cafes) for processing climate distress. She is in private practice in New York City.

Wendy Greenspun, docteure en psychologie clinique et psychanalyste, est membre du comité directeur et du conseil d’administration du Climate Psychology Alliance – North America. Elle fait partie du corps professoral du Manhattan Institute for Psychoanalysis, du programme d’études supérieures en thérapie de mariage et de couple de l’université Adelphi et du programme de formation et d’éducation en thérapie de couple de l’Institut William Alanson White. Elle a présenté des articles, des ateliers et des cours au niveau national et international pour les professionnels de la santé mentale sur les moyens de travailler avec la détresse climatique et le deuil. Elle propose également des ateliers sur le développement de la résilience émotionnelle pour les activistes climatiques, les lycéens et les étudiants. Elle a dirigé des forums de groupe (cafés climatiques) pour traiter la détresse climatique. Elle exerce en cabinet privé à New York.

REGISTER HERE