De-Industrializing Subjectivity, Restoring Senses and Telling New Stories
Brett Bloom will lead a two-day workshop De-Industrializing Subjectivity, Restoring Senses and Telling New Stories which will be realised in Suomenlinna, Helsinki on Wednesday–Thursday, 2–3 July, 2014. If you are interested in participating in the workshop, inquiries can be sent to info(at)hiap.fi by 25 June, 2014.
What kinds of subjective experiences of our world and of our selves are normalised and routinised under the all-pervasive use of fossil fuels? How deeply does petroleum penetrate our bodies, minds and ways of being in the world? What does it mean to do work to shift individual and collective subjectivity to prepare for climate change and the ensuing chaos it brings? How can we work towards an ecology that puts the concerns of the environment, other species, landscapes, on equal footing with those of people? What are we capable of, and what do we suppress, in terms of our emotions, our senses, and our aesthetic awareness living in a carbon-based society?
These questions and more will be explored during this two-day workshop. It will take a look at the individual and collective subjectivity we have when we live in a petroleum-driven and human centered culture—the very ways we conceive of ourselves, our behaviour, and what is normal amongst our communities. It will investigate ways of working our selves out of The Petroleum Space/Time Continuum—a state of experience and being that generates every single one of our social/spatial/temporal encounters. It is the condition we need to understand and begin to dismantle to be able to connect deeply with the locations we inhabit as well as transition to something utterly other.
The workshop will ask questions about how we can develop post-carbon aesthetics and social structures: how we can de-industrialise our notions of self. It will be a combination of discussions of selected texts and direct exercises in understanding our perceptual capacities, which evolved over millennia and predate the advent of civilisation remaining mainly dormant as they are not needed in the sped up, stripped down, abstracted, collapsed space/time we live in.
We will do mapping, listening, and other perceptual exercises. We will think about how we may work on emergent subjectivities on our way to developing skills needed to endure crises, collapse, and climate chaos. What is needed is not some nostalgic return to hunter-gatherer-cave-painting-culture, but an honest conversation about what it means to power down our aesthetics and by extension our larger society.
The workshop is being done in conjunction with the exhibition Dissolving Frontiers, which is part of the larger, 5-year long Frontiers In Retreat initiative.
Radio Aktiv Sonic Deep Map (2013)
SUPERKILEN – Extreme Neoliberalism Copenhagen Style
Read Brett's essay about the park.
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Video interview:
Watch our interview of SeedBroadcast, a mobile project that is part seed library and part seed-saving-story-collecting machine-recording the stories of seed saving, farming, and food sovereignty work being done around the US.
Download a poster Bonnie made about biodiversity in a vacant lot in the Amager borough of Copenhagen, in collaboration with biologist, Inger Kærgaard, ornithologist, Jørn Lennart Larsen and botanist, Camilla Sønderberg Brok: A BRIEF TAXONOMY OF A LOT
We made and installed a network of bat houses in Urbana, Illinois, to support the local and regional bat population, but also to begin a conversation about re-making the built environment.
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BOOK REVIEW:
We write often about artists and art groups that work with putting ‘culture’ back in agriculture. Here is a new favorite: myvillages, a group of three women based in Germany, the Netherlands, and the UK. Read more...
Post Revolutionary Exercises
We really admire the dedicated hard work of Kultivator who seeks to fuse agriculture and art in their work. Click this sentence to get a PDF of their poster collection called "Post Revolutionary Exercises."
Cultural Practices Within And Across
This amazing book networks urban and rural resilience and sustainability projects around the world. Deeply inspiring projects in Romania, Paris, San Francisco, and elsewhere.
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