As part of Shake! continuity Orla and Grainne attended a training weekend on the art of nature. Here are some of their reflections on the weekend.
The Art of Nature event featured many artists and environmental activists who discussed their own projects. These projects really blurred the boundaries between art and environmental activism demonstrating how artists do have a role very much beyond art for arts sake.
Below are some of the highlights of the weekend and projects you might be interested in:
Shelly Sacks had given a talk
about “The university of the trees”. This encouraged the use of alternative thinking such as using intuition and experiential learning to bring people together to discuss ideas and question our concepts of knowledge. After the talks there was time to split into groups and discuss issues further or to go outside and practice the 'University of the Trees' concepts. We were given free reign to how we did this.
so she proposed to the group that she was going to have a wander outside to
find a tree and welcomed members of the group to join her as a place to discuss
and think about some questions. As It was a sunny day and I was getting tired
sitting indoors I joined her groups:
The questions:
·
What are the key issues regarding
the relationships between people and nature?
·
How do social cultural things
relate to nature?
·
How do we build a knowledgeable
active population to protect nature and ourselves?
Some of us stayed behind in the meeting room where we transformed the
space into an interactive sculpture using the chairs and paper.
The tree our group chose, in a
playground, just outside Greenpeace HQ. The tree had two basketballs lodged in
its stumpy branches, had been chopped back quite a bit, but still stood tall
through the close approaching tarmac.
It was an interesting experience
going out together to find a tree, once we had found a tree and put the banner
around it we all felt a different connection to the space and each other.
Passers-by also stopped for discussion. We all noted how we noticed the other
trees nearby from the space a lot more now and felt better connected to the
nature in the area. When asked how I felt I mentioned
that in a forest the trees act as a network, helping each other out and I had
heard that if a tree becomes weak the other trees help it out through their
connections to each other and build it back up through the forest network. This
relates to everyday life, and the tarmac and the fences around this tree are
disconnecting it from the other trees and sometimes we can become disconnected
form each other in built up areas too. The stronger connections we have with
each other the stronger we become, and we can learn form nature that way. When we came back into the building and into the room
with everyone else,
it seems artists don’t like being
kept sitting on chairs for too long! it drives them a bit crazy! - Some of the
group had responded with an art installation involving all the chairs in the
room and ripping up sheets of paper! It certainly ended the day on and
ice-breaker ready for the next day! :)
Clive Owen- Soil Culture
Clive’s
talk was very useful! I (Grainne) am working with an not-for-profit community
interest group LESS in Lancaster at the moment on a
game they have got funding to develop /
which is a social, experimental game that aims to get people engaging more with
their environment, each other, and thinking about their everyday choices in a
playful, yet eco/ethically minded way.In
Clive's talk he spoke about a project “Games people Play” which was a series of
activities and exhibitions put on by ‘Soil Culture’ and ‘The Centre for
Contemporary Art and the Natural World’. He
said how “Games can tell us a great deal about human nature” He
gave some great examples of games that are all ready out there that get us to
question our everyday choices and ethics:
· Evoke– social network game “10 week crash course in saving the world”
· Phonestory – an educational app that shows the dark side off where your phone came
from
He
also discussed sport and our emotions in sport – territorial control,
attachment to a team, triumphs, despair, confidence, and anxiety. He
showed some Photography by Newsha Tavakolian that emphasise sport emotion.
There
was a lively discussion after his talk and lots of focus on the gaming side of
his talk. It was pointed out that there is a big “generation of gamers at the
moment that we need to tap into”. There was also a quite amusing heated debate
about the game ‘Candy Crush’, one group member was discussing how her teenage
son wastes so much time on the game, another group member fired back that she
doesn’t see why it is a problem for people to play Candy Crush if they want too,
especially on a tube journeys where time is wasted anyway and she felt that
sometimes games are a good tool to disconnect us from ourselves and society.