‘Art and Ecology’ sets out to change the way that people understand today’s ecological crisis through the art and visual cultures of the past. We believe that the way out of our current crisis requires not just technological solutions, but a wholescale shift in the way people think about environmental issues.
Our approach responds to the current need to transform public attitudes to the climate emergency, moving away from complacency and pessimism towards curiosity and active engagement. This challenge can be approached from many angles, but we start from the hypothesis that reconnecting art and science will provide part of a more meaningful and sustainable solution to the climate emergency.
The aim is to disprove the view that the Arts and Humanities are fundamentally separated from scientific knowledge, and that only the latter holds solutions to environmental crisis. If the separation of art and science is part of the problem, what can we do to reconnect them in people’s minds, and will this change their actions in positive ways?
Our response is to collaborate with museum collections across the Four Nations that span art, natural history, science, and technology. Working with these museums, and the range of objects within them, offers a means of engaging interdisciplinary conversations about crucial topics such as climate breakdown, sustainability, urban growth, human-animal relations and biodiversity. Objects and images have the power to change the way people perceive the world. Museums across the UK, hold an incredible amount of material through which to tell stories about the ecological crisis: what is currently lacking are the people to make the relevant connections, create the resources, and take the conversation to as many people as possible. Our project offers a solution to this.
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Email Gillian Hosier or call on 01908 858285 to discuss this project