Climate Imaginaries
CI

In the climate debate, many voices remain unheard. Climate Imaginaries was established to explore and address this imbalance.

Who holds the privilege of imagining the future of climate change? And for whom are its consequences an unavoidable reality?

How can we understand the impact of climate change through material artistic research?

How can interspecies imaginaries help form different relationships with our planet and imagine new possible futures?

Recognizing these inequities is vital, as rising sea levels disproportionately impact low-income communities and people of color—groups that are often the most vulnerable yet the least responsible for the climate crisis.

Public Events & Participation

Climate Imaginaries events are announced through the ARIAS Calendar, the newsletter, and social media channels, and are open to anyone who is interested in participating. Read more about past events by using the filter CI and search bar on sub themes on our main page. Artists and researchers who want to engage in further exchange are welcome to join both the  group and our shared research activities. 

Climate Imaginaries at Sea

The project Climate Imaginaries at Sea speculates possible futures in and around water through various artistic and participatory research practices. 

Three collaborating research groups bring the project forward: Art & Spatial Praxis at the Gerrit Rietveld Academy (GRA), the Lectorate of the Academy of Theatre and Dance at the Amsterdam University of the Arts (AHK) and the Visual Methodologies Collective at the Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences (AUAS). The research groups work in partnership with ARIAS, a platform for artistic research in Amsterdam, and a network of partners that includes Tolhuistuin, the Institute for Sound & Vision and CoECI – Centre of Expertise for Creative Innovation.

Starting in 2023, three newly developed artistic research studios will invite artists to develop artistic imaginaries that address rising sea levels. The artistic research studios will pay particular attention to perspectives often missing from mainstream climate change debates: material, indigenous, and interspecies inquiry. Each studio will work without predetermined disciplinary boundaries through practice-led artistic research and written and non-textual forms such as installations, sounds, movements, images and objects. In addition, students will be actively involved in the research by developing imaginative engagements with rising sea levels as both a future prospect and a present reality in various parts of the world.Imagining the future of climate change is crucial for accepting change, whether in our personal lives, environment or politics. As the author Amitav Ghosh points out, “the climate crisis is also a crisis of the imagination.” 

Acknowledging an unequal present where rising sea levels affect low-income populations and people of colour the hardest is crucial, as those communities are also the most vulnerable and the ones with the lowest amount of emissions responsible for the climate crisis. 

The questions leading the studios are:

How can artists connect people to indigenous water and climate knowledges across multiple cultural perspectives where the consequences of rising sea levels are already a reality in the present? 

Amanda PiñaJoy BrandsmaDorothy Blokland

How can we understand the impact of rising sea levels in relation to housing, clothing and soil through material artistic research?

Müge Yilmaz

How can interspecies imaginaries help form different relationships with rising seas beyond considering them as merely a threat?

Carlo De GaetanoJanine ArminFemke Dekker (Loma Doom)

In the summer of 2024, the three artistic research studios started their new chapter, focusing on climate justice.

Past Events

Past events include:
Climate Imaginaries at Sea Festival #1 
Climate Imaginaries at Sea Festival #2

Publications

Zine Making Waves #1 
Zine Making Waves #2 

HIGHLIGHTS
PUBLICATIONS