Monthly Archives: November 2015

Public art projects that double as renewable energy sources – The Guardian

We wanted to highlight this feature you might have missed about the integration of public art and renewables from LAGI!

What happens when renewable energy meets public art? The Land Art Generator Initiative, or Lagi, founded by Pittsburgh-based artists Elizabeth Monoian and Robert Ferry, is trying to find the answer with several proposed public art structures designed to generate power while inspiring and educating their viewers.

The initiative has collected hundreds of designs from competitions held in Abu Dhabi, New York City and Copenhagen. At the 2016 competition, which will be held in Santa Monica, California, entrants will design structures that harvest clean energy or generate clean drinking water.

Read the full article from earlier this month here: http://www.theguardian.com/sustainable-business/2015/nov/06/renewable-energy-climate-change-land-art-generator-initiative

IMAGE:  This rendering shows an aquatic bird concept, designed by a group of London-based designers, which would be outfitted with enough hydraulic turbines and solar cells to power an entire neighborhood. Designed to educate, it would sink lower when energy demand increases, and would have an open interior area where visitors can see how it works.

Water: A Necessary Conversation – A Southern California Women’s Caucus for Art Exhibition

November 14-December 6, 2015

The Southern California Women’s Caucus for Art (SCWCA) in partnership with Avenue 50 Studio presents Water: A Necessary Conversation, an engaging exhibition that opens on Saturday, November 14, 2015. The decision by curator Susan King to hang contemporary artworks alongside activist posters strikes a lively visual dialogue between past and present artistic treatments of this important subject. In King’s words: “it emphasizes the enduring human need to manage water resources and the usefulness of art in conveying that message.” The abstract and representational works by twenty artists from across the country range from painting, prints and video to iPhone photography. The activist posters including two Robbie Canal posters are courtesy of the Center for the Study of Political Graphics.  A stakeholders conversation will take place on Sunday, December 6, 2015 to further expand the public dialogue.

Participating artists include: Elaine Alibrandi, Melissa Richardson Banks, Mariona Barkus, Andrea Broyles, Danielle Eubank, Karen Hansen, Shelley Hefler, Brenda Hurst, Ann Isolde, J. J. L’Heureux, Yana Marshall, Andrea Monroe, Eva Montealegre, Therese Moriarty, Sandra Mueller, Seda Saar, Karen Schifman, Susie Stockholm, Stephanie Sydney, Teresa Young and the “Artists Formerly Known as Women” collective.  The historical posters including two works by Robbie Conal are courtesy of The Center for The Study of Political Graphics.More at scwca.org.

Opening Reception: November 14. 2015 

Dates: November 14-December 6, 2015

Hours: 10-4 pm, Tues.-Sunday (closed Friday)

Closing: Stakeholders
Conversation: Sunday, Dec. 6, 2-4 pm<

Venue: Avenue 50 Studio, 131 N Avenue 50, Los Angeles, CA 90042

ABOUT SCWCA: The Women’s Caucus for Art is the leading national membership organization for women in the visual arts professions. Founded in 1976, the Southern California chapter provides programs, workshops and exhibitions opportunities. Visit scwca.org.

ABOUT AVENUE 50 STUDIO: Avenue 50 Studio is an arts presentation organization grounded in Latina/o culture, visual arts, and the Northeast Los Angeles Community, that seeks to bridge cultures through artistic expression, using content-driven art to educate and to stimulate intercultural understanding. Visit avenue50stuio.org

ABOUT THE CURATOR: Curator Susan King is an art historian and artist who currently teaches at Loyola Marymount College and Laguna College of Art and Design. Her areas of expertise include modern and contemporary art and design. She will become national president of WCA in February 2016

EARTH CAN YOU HEAR US? ArtCop21 Summit Launch #artcop #cop21

‘In response to the tragic recent events in Paris, we – COAL and Cape Farewell – believe spearheading an inspiring, collaborative and creative global culture to mark and amplify COP21 negotiations is more important than ever.’  Read full statement

EARTH CAN YOU HEAR US? THE ARTCOP21 SUMMIT LAUNCH: LIVE!

On the first day of COP21, Monday 30th November at St Pancras Station, London – ArtCop21 partners with 100% renewable firm Good Energy, to bring a live and loud array of performances calling for major climate action.

EARTH CAN YOU HEAR US? will fill the station’s Grand Terrace with music, poetry and talks, as UK delegates board the trains bound for Paris to participate in the most crucial United Nations summit in history.

Hosted by BBC Radio 1 presenter Gemma Cairney, and starring UN Climate Poet Kathy Jetnil-Kijiner and internationally acclaimed beatboxer Shlomo.

Also speaking will be David Buckland, Director of Cape Farewell – the UK organisation behind the ArtCop21 programme – and Juliet Davenport, founder of Good Energy.

EARTH CAN YOU HEAR US? will also feature a very special surprise mid-set celebrating the power of collaboration and community to bring about positive change – so whatever you do, don’t miss out – join the event on Facebook!

ArtsBuild Ontario Workshop Info: Dollars to $ense Energy Conservation Workshop

ArtsBuild Ontario is excited to be partnering with Natural Resources Canada and Toronto Hydro to offer our organizations this valuable energy conservation training experience. Designed specifically for arts facilities, participants  get to know energy basics and discover cost-saving opportunities from the experts. Whether you’re involved in a new build, renovation or ongoing maintenance in your facility, Energy Conservation can help you realize potential saving –and this workshop will help you understand how!

DETAILS

When: Tuesday, December 1 at 8am – 4pm

Where: Gladstone Hotel (1214 Queen St W, Toronto, M6J 1J6)

Cost: $40+ HST per person, which includes a catered lunch and breaks

Register here: http://bit.ly/1Nep1zx

ArtCOP Scotland: Beautiful Renewables Event

This post comes from Creative Carbon Scotland

ArtCOP Scotland got off to a flying start on Wednesday when CCS hosted a talk by the Land Art Generator Initiative at the Edinburgh Centre for Carbon Innovation. ArtCOP Scotland is Scotland’s Climate Change Arts Season, coordinated by Creative Carbon Scotland but incorporating events and commissions from many different partners and all over the country. Check out the website for more details.

Diphoto 1rectors of the Land Art Generator Initiative Robert Ferry & Elizabeth Monoian gave a good and very varied crowd a lightning tour of the project, which aims to combine public art with reasonably large scale renewable energy generation, and therefore, make renewables both more acceptable and more wonderful! The project started with a competition in Abu Dhabi in 2010, an open call seeking inspirational projects from teams of artists, engineers and architects to design beautiful renewables for the low carbon city of Masdar. This was followed by further competitions in New York (2012) and Copenhagen (2014). The next competition will be for Santa Monica in California in 2016, but Glasgow is hosting a mini LAGI this year.

Robert and Elizabeth showed us fascinating slides of projects as pedestrian (but obvious – why doesn’t this happen as a matter of course?) as long strips of photovoltaic cells along the side of motorways to extraordinary forests of poles that sway in the wind, squeezing piezoelectric actuators to generate electricity whilst creating a magical place to walk and play. Some of the projects are eminently do-able, others are on the edge of sci-fi. Although few (if any) of the designs have yet been built, there are some in the pipeline and it’s surely a great thing to have over 600 developed ideas in the bank, inspiring others, setting the agenda and creating the future. (There’s a long history of sci-fi leading to innovation.)

The mini-LAGI in Glasgow is a different sort of competition. Chris Fremantle of eco/art/scot/land co-hosted the ArtCOP Scotland event. He has worked with Sustainable Glasgow to enable LAGI to invite three successful teams from previous competitions to work with Scottish architects and artists to produce designs for beautiful renewable projects for a site at Dundashill in north Glasgow. (We were thrilled to hear that the project came out of an early Green Tease when Chris got talking with Heather Claridge from Sustainable Glasgow! That’s what the Green Teases are for. Get the next one in your diary now.) Dundashill is an exciting site urban site that is earmarked for development. It has wind potential (clue: it’s on a hill…) and possibilities in the canal that’s nearby. The teams are meeting now and they’ll work remotely over the next few months, reconvening in February with developed designs. Watch this space…

One interesting thing about the LAGI approach is the cross fertilisation that happens when you bring together disparate teams of artists, engineers, architects and others from different backgrounds. That’s precisely what we at Creative Carbon Scotland are trying to do, mashing up art and sustainability; that’s the very aim of the ECCI where we held the event; and that was the very nature of the audience. We had engineers, artists, students, educationalists, funders, energy managers… all mixed together in a glorious and fertile mix. I remembered how on a trip in a biosphere in Mexico I had been struck by the fecundity of that point where sea water meets river water – suddenly the mixture of different kinds leads to enormous variety of life forms. We ended the session with an invitation to the audience get talking to someone they didn’t know, from a different field. It came to a noisy and joyous conclusion.

Also in ArtCOP Scotland are a couple of other projects that link to the Land Art Generator Initiative. Ellie Harrison’s Radical Renewable Art + Activism Fund will use a wind turbine to generate energy to fund a ‘no strings attached’ grant scheme for art-activist projects in the UK. She’s launching the project outside the CCA on December 17th at 6.30pm. A Fairer Greener Scotland by 2030 will provide a different way of looking at the future, asking participants for ideas about how they want the future to look. The discussions are taking place in Edinburgh and Glasgow, so sign up now and maybe take a look at the blog about our Mull Sustainability/Arts residency in 2014 which imagined scenarios of a future Scotland. Or just browse the ArtCOP Scotland site for other events. A glorious mix of artistic responses to climate change.

The post ArtCOP Scotland: Beautiful Renewables Event appeared first on Creative Carbon Scotland.

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Creative Carbon Scotland is a partnership of arts organisations working to put culture at the heart of a sustainable Scotland. We believe cultural and creative organisations have a significant influencing power to help shape a sustainable Scotland for the 21st century.

In 2011 we worked with partners Festivals Edinburgh, the Federation of Scottish Threatre and Scottish Contemporary Art Network to support over thirty arts organisations to operate more sustainably.

We are now building on these achievements and working with over 70 cultural organisations across Scotland in various key areas including carbon management, behavioural change and advocacy for sustainable practice in the arts.

Our work with cultural organisations is the first step towards a wider change. Cultural organisations can influence public behaviour and attitudes about climate change through:

Changing their own behaviour;
Communicating with their audiences;
Engaging the public’s emotions, values and ideas.

Go to Creative Carbon Scotland

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Cock and Bull (and other events for ArtCOP Scotland)

This post comes to you from EcoArtScotland

Cock and Bull is a performance piece by Nic Green with Laura Bradshaw & Rosana Cade taking place on Sunday 6 December @ 3:00 – 4:00 pm, at the CCA in Glasgow.  It’s part of the ArtCOP Scotland programme of performances, exhibitions, talks (including Beautiful Renewables with the Land Art Generator Initiative on 18 November).

Halfway through the UN COP21 climate change talks in Paris, three females convene to perform their own, alternative conference of parties. Exploring power, voice, agency and sustainability they use the most heard phrases from governmental rhetoric, to dismantle and redress dominant paradigms of power and politics.

The UN Climate Change COP meetings are arguably the most important international events since those equivalent meetings about nuclear weapons that occurred in the 80s, but this time instead of just a few ‘major powers’, everyone is there, and the small countries and fringe programmes are significant too.

The French environment and arts organisation COAL have co-ordinated events in Paris, and Creative Carbon Scotland working with a consortium of other arts organisations in Scotland (including from the North East Deveron Arts and South West The Stove Network, as well as Gayfield, Firefly, Lifecycle of Stuff and the Royal Conservatoire) are mounting a programme in Scotland – you can find all the details on the ArtCOP Scotland website.

ecoartscotland is a resource focused on art and ecology for artists, curators, critics, commissioners as well as scientists and policy makers. It includes ecoartscotland papers, a mix of discussions of works by artists and critical theoretical texts, and serves as a curatorial platform.

It has been established by Chris Fremantle, producer and research associate with On The Edge Research, Gray’s School of Art, The Robert Gordon University. Fremantle is a member of a number of international networks of artists, curators and others focused on art and ecology.

Go to EcoArtScotland

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PhD Studentships in Theatre Studies at the University of Glasgow, 2016-17

This post comes to you from EcoArtScotland

Prof Carl Lavery asked us to circulate this.  If you have an interest in ecological issues and performance, this is a sympathetic place to study.

Theatre Studies at the University of Glasgow is pleased to invite applications for PhD studentships, through its involvement in the AHRC Doctoral Training Partnership Scotland (DTP). We particularly welcome research proposals which relate to our research strengths in the following areas: ecology, environment and heritage, history and historiography, dramaturgy and playwrighting, adaptation, intermediality and digital arts, Scottish theatre, practice-based research, queer and gender theory, Shakespeare and performance, intercultural performance, physical theatre and actor training, live art, curation and museology, autobiography, site-based performance, contemporary German and French theatre, temporalities and geochronology, theatre and the elements, politics and memory.

The DTP Scotland is run by the Scottish Graduate School for Arts & Humanities (http://www.sgsah.ac.uk) which offers innovative training and skills development opportunities for its funded students (e.g. Internships, Artist-in-Residency schemes, Summer School, second-language courses). This national provision complements the excellent doctoral training offered by the University of Glasgow.

Studentships are available to applicants living in the UK and the European Union. Applications for interdisciplinary projects are also very welcome. For full details, please visit http://www.sgsah.ac.uk

In addition, the College of Arts will offer a number of scholarships for PhD study in 2016. These scholarships are open to UK/EU and International applicants.

The deadline for all scholarship applications is Wednesday, 6 January 2016. To be considered for an award, candidates must have applied to study at the University of Glasgow and have provided two academic references through the university’s application system.

Further details can be found at http://www.gla.ac.uk/colleges/arts/graduateschool/fundingopportunities/

for more information contact Professor Carl Lavery (carl.lavery@glasgow.ac.uk)

ecoartscotland is a resource focused on art and ecology for artists, curators, critics, commissioners as well as scientists and policy makers. It includes ecoartscotland papers, a mix of discussions of works by artists and critical theoretical texts, and serves as a curatorial platform.

It has been established by Chris Fremantle, producer and research associate with On The Edge Research, Gray’s School of Art, The Robert Gordon University. Fremantle is a member of a number of international networks of artists, curators and others focused on art and ecology.

Go to EcoArtScotland

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Radical Renewable Art + Activism Fund – Kickstarter

This post comes to you from EcoArtScotland

Originally posted on power culture:

RRAAF (Radical Renewable Art + Activism Fund) will use a wind turbine to generate renewable energy to fund a ‘no strings attached’ grant scheme for art-activist projects.

photo-originalMy name is Ellie Harrison and I’m an artist based in Glasgow (UK). I’m fundraising for “phase 1” of an ambitious new project called the Radical Renewable Art + Activism Fund (RRAAF), which, once set up, will be a new and autonomous alternative funding scheme for art-activist projects in the UK.

By supporting this Kickstarter, you will become a RRAAF Founder – helping to raise awareness for the project and fund the initial scoping work being carried out by Georgy Davis fromCommunity Energy Scotland. This will be completed ready to be presented at our Launch Event at CCA Glasgow on 17 December 2015 (6:30pm), where we will outline plans for how we can make RRAAF a reality in the coming…

ecoartscotland is a resource focused on art and ecology for artists, curators, critics, commissioners as well as scientists and policy makers. It includes ecoartscotland papers, a mix of discussions of works by artists and critical theoretical texts, and serves as a curatorial platform.

It has been established by Chris Fremantle, producer and research associate with On The Edge Research, Gray’s School of Art, The Robert Gordon University. Fremantle is a member of a number of international networks of artists, curators and others focused on art and ecology.

Go to EcoArtScotland

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Professor of Art and Ecology/Land Arts of the American West Endowed Chair

The Univeristy of New Mexico is looking for a Full Professor of Art and Ecology. This is a tenured appointment with five-year renewable contract as Land Arts of the American West (LAAW) Endowed Chair. Full time. Works with LAAW Field Program Director and area faculty to further develop the LAAW program and increase the national and international profile of Art and Ecology at UNM. Directs the Land Arts Mobile Research Center and administers the existing Andrew W. Mellon grant. Must have the desire and ability to work with and further attract a diverse student population.

The University of New Mexico is located in Albuquerque, New Mexico, a city of 600,000 on the Rio Grande at an altitude of 5,200 feet. Albuquerque’s historical pluralism gives the city a fascinating mix in terms of its arts, cuisine, languages, and values. The University of New Mexico is a large, diverse state university with a faculty of over 3,000 serving approximately 32,700 students. The Department of Art and Art History offers the B.A., B.F.A., M.A., M.F.A., and Ph.D. degrees.

The University of New Mexico is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer and Educator.

Minimum Qualifications:

  • MFA or PhD in Studio Art or Master’s with 7 or more years of experience in the field of Art and Ecology
  • 7 or more years as an exhibiting artist/published scholar with an extensive international record
  • 7 or more years of expertise in Environmental Art, Eco Art and/or Social Practice

Preferred Qualifications:

  • Experience in administration of academic programs and/or private enterprises
  • Extensive creative research demonstrated by local, regional, or national record of public engagement
  • Conversant in contemporary issues of theory and aesthetics, especially as they relate to environmental and ecological art, and an ability to teach related courses
  • Demonstrated excellence in teaching with experience at the undergraduate and graduate level
  • A demonstrated commitment to diversity, equity, inclusion, and student success, as well as working with broadly diverse communities

More Details: unmjobs.unm.edu/applicants/Central?quickFind=85080  

The 50 Shades of Green Conference: Show and Tell Room

This post comes from Creative Carbon Scotland

Over the course of the day, we heard from nine arts organisations: ranging in geography, activity and environmental action. There is so much green arts work already taking place in Scotland, but often there is no forum for its discussion: we wanted to host an informal space where speakers and attendees could talk about the simple (or difficult) steps they had taken, ask questions of each other, and spark inspiration and connections.

Summaries of the presentations of each of our speakers can be found below:

Rishaad Moudden, Ayr Gaiety: Capital Project Planning and Staff Engagement

Bravely volunteering as one of the first speakers of the conference, Rishaad talked us through current and future plans for Ayr Gaiety – a B-listed Theatre and Arts centre based in South Ayrshire that host over 200 touring productions every year. Ayr Gaiety is preparing for the final stages of the proposed capital project, and Rishaad told us about the challenges to date, as well as filling us in on his strategies for engaging staff members in more sustainable behaviour – including rollerblading to work!

Kirsty Sommerville, Cryptic: Environmental Sustainability in a Smaller Arts Office

Cryptic is a music, sonic art, and multimedia arts organisation that hosts a series of regular and one-off events and festivals with a national and international audience, run by a small team and based in the CCA in Glasgow. Kirsty spoke to us about the opportunities and challenges presented by this small scale, the sustainability limitations of operating as a tenant within a larger organisation (and how to adapt), and the development of an office environmental policy with a wide reaching impact.

Fiona Doring, Impact Arts: Wonky Carrots and the Urban Green Project

The Cranhill Urban Green project demonstrates an evolution in the sustainable design ideas that Impact Arts has been investigating for a number of years. Fiona told us about the social impact that the project has, in terms of green space empowerment, as well as the aesthetic, edible and practical elements of the project, which combines artistic considerations with our engagement with our surrounds.

Fraser White, Yooz: Social Sustainability and Creative Re-use

Based in Bellshill, Yooz is a reuse and recycling social enterprise which provides creative opportunities for those it works with, as well as providing a materials resource for the local and artistic community. Their show-and-tell item was a massive giant spider planter, created by a member of their team given the creative brief to ‘make something’. As an expert in maximising material capture and re-use, Fraser told us of the variety of items Yooz has received and redistributed: including pantomime sets and antique safes!

Gabrielle Macbeth, Glasgow Women’s Library: Working with Volunteers

Gabrielle discussed the multiple benefits of their PaperGirls scheme. Initiated as a means of increasing the distribution of their events programme, the GWL invite voluntary paper girls to take up paper rounds across the city, dropping off programmes at cafés, venues and community centres which might not be reached otherwise. As well as promoting greener, more active travel modes around Glasgow, the scheme also has a positive social impact, allowing for cyclists to buddy up and discover new parts of the city.

Charlotte Riley, Paragon Music: Claimexpenses.com and Greening the Programme

Charlotte spoke about Paragon’s adoption of ClaimExpenses as well as programme elements of the company’s work which touch upon environmental themes. As an inclusive music company there are important accessibility priorities for the company when it comes to travel and Charlotte sees their role as an important influencing body for partners and participants. She’s embarked upon this first year of using ClaimExpenses as a data gathering exercise, taking on the majority of the work herself before rolling it out to the rest of the team with some aims and objectives for understanding and promoting sustainable travel. She also mentioned a production, ‘Torque’, which showed in 2013 which will be running again next year which looks at renewable energy and the transformation of raw energy into electricity.

Mike Adkins, An Lanntair: Building Improvements and LED Alterations

The group were particularly impressed after Mike revealed how he has not only met the stringent 20% energy reduction target set by management, but is also on track to exceed it through his investment in high-efficiency technology and experimentation with LED lighting for the An Lanntair theatre and arts building. Mike’s tales of testing the effectivity of LED stage and strip lights against staff perceptions and traditional replacement costs proffered a great example of the potential impact of green technology.

Tie MacBeth, Centre for Contemporary Art: Expanding Environmental Policies and Sustainable Creations

As an artistic organisation co-ordinating their own series of activities, a group of artistic tenants, and a café, the CCA’s decision to rewrite their environmental policy in 2014 required input from a large group of internal stakeholders. Tie also told us about their creative solutions to ongoing sustainability issues around their building, presenting the group with a very curious object, later revealed to be a vertical bike storage hook (and a result of an upcycled exhibition install item)!

Emma Beatt, Federation of Scottish Theatre: Procedures, Cocktails and the Recipe for Embedding Sustainability

As an organisation managing a large network and offering a series of trainings and opportunities for the theatre arts sector, FSTs management systems provide an exemplary model for maintaining procedures through staff changes and other irregularities. Emma used the metaphor of different cocktail recipes to explain the useful functions of FSTs procedural database, and we explored how embedding procedural sustainability can impact a wide-ranging organisation.

 


50 Shades of Green: Stories of Sustainability in the Arts Sector took place on 6 October 2015 at the Pearce Institute in Glasgow. It was Creative Carbon Scotland’s first conference for green arts organisations working to affect their environmental sustainability. A copy of the programme for the event can be found here.

To become part of the Scottish green arts community, and to hear more about events like 50 Shades of Green (as well as our other free training sessions and resources), sign up to the Green Arts Initiative.

 

The post The 50 Shades of Green Conference: Show and Tell Room appeared first on Creative Carbon Scotland.

———-

Creative Carbon Scotland is a partnership of arts organisations working to put culture at the heart of a sustainable Scotland. We believe cultural and creative organisations have a significant influencing power to help shape a sustainable Scotland for the 21st century.

In 2011 we worked with partners Festivals Edinburgh, the Federation of Scottish Threatre and Scottish Contemporary Art Network to support over thirty arts organisations to operate more sustainably.

We are now building on these achievements and working with over 70 cultural organisations across Scotland in various key areas including carbon management, behavioural change and advocacy for sustainable practice in the arts.

Our work with cultural organisations is the first step towards a wider change. Cultural organisations can influence public behaviour and attitudes about climate change through:

Changing their own behaviour;
Communicating with their audiences;
Engaging the public’s emotions, values and ideas.

Go to Creative Carbon Scotland

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