publication – CreaTures https://creatures-eu.org Creative Practices For Transformational Futures Fri, 02 Dec 2022 13:06:43 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.8.10 Arts and Culture at COP26 Report Launched https://creatures-eu.org/arts-and-culture-at-cop26-report-launched/ Tue, 11 Oct 2022 09:43:57 +0000 https://creatures-eu.org/?p=6609 Creative Carbon Scotland have produced a new report that tracks the creative projects that took place around COP26 (the United Nations climate negotiations that were held in Glasgow in November 2021). The report was funded by CreaTures, in order to explore the contribution of arts and culture to COP26 campaigning, as part of the Observatory of contemporary trends in creative contributions to climate action.

The report an overview of contemporary trends in arts-led campaigning for climate action. A set of reflective case studies allow the authors Lewis Coenen-Rowe (culture/SHIFT Producer at Creative Carbon Scotland) and Wallace Heim (artist and researcher) to draw out key lessons on what works for creative programming around large-scale climate conferences.

Read the report here.

Graphic design and layout – by Savannah Vize.

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Dark Mountain https://creatures-eu.org/cases/dark-mountain/ Wed, 16 Dec 2020 15:31:39 +0000 https://creatures-eu.org/?post_type=cases&p=635 The Dark Mountain project began with a manifesto released by two young English writers in 2009, and soon grew into a cultural movement that explored the “unravellings” of impending environmental collapse and ecocide. In doing so, the project sought to construct new stories which responded to the realities of global disruption, and crafted new ways forward.

This “collapse of civilisation”, it was argued, called for “uncivilised” responses, in particular with reference to creative practices. The project has been suggested for inclusion by the creative practitioners we spoke to because of its experimentation with new organisational models and ways of being; its prefigurative politics of ‘living differently’; its manifesto, journal and festivals.

“Together, we are walking away from the stories that our societies like to tell themselves, the stories that prevent us seeing clearly the extent of the ecological, social and cultural unravelling that is now underway. We are making art that doesn’t take the centrality of humans for granted. We are tracing the deep cultural roots of the mess the world is in. And we are looking for other stories, ones that can help us make sense of a time of disruption and uncertainty.” – Dark Mountain 

“It was that space for our ideology, to map narratives for co-adventure and uncertainty”

Ann Light
Img credit: Dark Mountain

Image credit: Dark Mountain

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