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Research The Groningen Research Institute for the Study of Culture (ICOG) Research Research centres Research Centre for Arts in Society

Summer School Art History public lecture - ROSAMUND PORTUS (UWE Bristol): "Art and Ecology: Exploring Creative Responses to the Bee Decline"

When:Tu 29-06-2021 16:30 - 18:00
Where:Online
A color photograph of seven persons walking around in white disposable overalls and headphones in an orange-lit windowless room.
A color photograph of seven persons walking around in white disposable overalls and headphones in an orange-lit windowless room.

The summer school Curating Art & Nature - The Knowledge of the Curator III offers a series of lectures open to the public. Tickets are free and available via eventbrite. All lectures take place online and are scheduled from 16.30-18.00 (CEST).

Art and Ecology: Exploring Creative Responses to the Bee Decline

As extinction crises become an increased focus of contemporary environmental conversations, creative projects that engage with stories of loss have emerged as a visible fixture of the cultural and creative landscape. This invites the question of what role creativity might play in shaping public action around extinction events. In answering this question, this lecture draws on research with creative practitioners who have produced bee-inspired creative works, marrying an exploration of creative outcome with that of creative intent. Through this examination, this lecture will explore how creative projects can simultaneously bear witness to extinction stories, pose challenging questions, engage an increased diversity of voice and experience in extinction narratives, and marry the telling of extinction stories with tangible action. This lecture will fundamentally argue that creative explorations are well-placed to engage in the world as forms of intervention, interrupting people’s relationship to extinction crises and serving as a catalyst for change.

About the speaker

Rosamund Portus is a research fellow at UWE Bristol, where she is working on a project examining young people’s agency in the climate crisis. Her recent PhD research considered the social and cultural dimensions of the ongoing loss of bees, with a particular focus on creative responses to the bee decline. Rosamund also works as an artist and has recently been selected to exhibit a project as part of the COP26 Reimagining Museums for Climate Action Exhibition in Glasgow.