Art-making for political ecology: practice, poetics and activism through enchantment

Selina Springett

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    1 Citation (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Our world’s climate is changing. The ramifications of the current ecological age and the possibility of habitation in–if not strictly post-apocalyptic–very different living conditions than the present, has spurned a pressing need to address our place in a more-than–human frame. A disjuncture between the urgency for concrete action on climate change and the actions of a political class unconvinced and/or slow to move has catalysed the need for action and collaboration across disciplines. The article draws on several creative projects as a springboard for environmental discourse. Notably, it discusses British artist Kate Pattison’s work on glaciers, Eve Mosher’s High Water Line project, and a work involving a local urban river system. Environmental communication transmitted through artmaking may speak to the problem of inaction in a way that employs soft persuasion and affective poetics. This article intimates artmaking can be a type of activism through enchantment, which has the potential to awaken personal and communities’ interests, and thereby encourage them to consider a more eco-centrically holistic future.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)478-494
    Number of pages17
    JournalContinuum
    Volume36
    Issue number3
    Early online date28 Dec 2021
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 4 May 2022

    Keywords

    • Activism
    • affective poetics
    • artmaking
    • arts-based communication
    • climate change
    • environment
    • more-than-human
    • soft persuasion

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