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1085 18th Street, Boulder, CO 80309

##DocumentingChange
View map Free Event

This symposium complements events and exhibitions across the University of Colorado Boulder in 2018-2019 around the theme Documenting Change: Our Climate.
Our present geologic era, the Anthropocene, has already mobilized transversal and hybridized research approaches by calling attention to the patchy assemblages of our environmental encounters. This symposium celebrates and encourages disciplinary cross-pollination.

At CU Art Museum:
10:30 a.m. Opening Remarks
10:45 a.m.—12:15 p.m. Panel: Embodied Approaches to Climate

  • Erin Leckey — Lens on Climate Change: Engaging Diverse Secondary Students in Climate Science through Filmmaking
  • Lisa Barlow: Teaching the Science of Climate Change: Reflections and Strategies
  • Beth Osnes — Drawdown Act Up
  • Julia Klema — Creative Witnessing: Deciphering Environment and Self through Artistic Process

12:15—1:30 p.m. Lunch Break (lunch on own)
1:30—3:00 p.m. Panel: Speculative Environmental Futures

  • Laura Devendorf — Designing Technologies to Frustrate
  • Madison Myers — Reworking and Making Kin in Jeff VanderMeer’s ‘Annihilation’
  • Roberta Restaino — Recoding Natural History
  • Minso Kim — Aura of Daylight

3:00—3:15 p.m. Coffee Break
3:15—4:45 p.m. Panel: Augmenting Environmental Discourse

  • Joanne Marras Tate, Warren Cook, Emily Loker: Suck the Anthropocene: Plastic Straws, Neoliberal Ideology and Environmental Action
  • Ashley Whipple & Maya Livio — Interdisciplinary Environmental Research: Lessons from the Field
  • Kelsey Simpkins: Art, the Arctic, and the Anthropocene: Effects of Contemporary Art on the Rights, Resources, and Resiliency of Arctic communities
  • Josh Westerman: After Denial: Right Wing Climate Realism and Its Implications

4:45—6:00 p.m. Dinner Break (dinner on own)

At CASE Building Auditorium:
6:00—7:30 p.m. Keynote: William L. Fox, Director, Center for Art + Environment

From the Anthropocene to the Anthroposcenic: Artists have responded to the global changes of the Anthropocene since the 1700s, their artworks evolving from cataloguing the world in painting and photography to interventions through performance and installation meant to counter existential ecological threats. The balance between aesthetics and functionality is key to the success and longevity of works across all these categories, from images in National Geographic to Land Art projects by Michael Heizer and Patricia Johanson.

Documenting Change exhibitions and programming are generously supported by CU Boulder's Grand Challenge: Our Space. Our Future., NEST (Nature, Environment, Science & Technology) Studio for the Arts, The Center for Western Thought and Policy, CU Boulder Student Arts and Cultural Enrichment fees, and CU Art Museum members.

  • Elliot Whitehead

1 person is interested in this event

User Activity

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1085 18th Street, Boulder, CO 80309

##DocumentingChange
View map Free Event

This symposium complements events and exhibitions across the University of Colorado Boulder in 2018-2019 around the theme Documenting Change: Our Climate.
Our present geologic era, the Anthropocene, has already mobilized transversal and hybridized research approaches by calling attention to the patchy assemblages of our environmental encounters. This symposium celebrates and encourages disciplinary cross-pollination.

At CU Art Museum:
10:30 a.m. Opening Remarks
10:45 a.m.—12:15 p.m. Panel: Embodied Approaches to Climate

  • Erin Leckey — Lens on Climate Change: Engaging Diverse Secondary Students in Climate Science through Filmmaking
  • Lisa Barlow: Teaching the Science of Climate Change: Reflections and Strategies
  • Beth Osnes — Drawdown Act Up
  • Julia Klema — Creative Witnessing: Deciphering Environment and Self through Artistic Process

12:15—1:30 p.m. Lunch Break (lunch on own)
1:30—3:00 p.m. Panel: Speculative Environmental Futures

  • Laura Devendorf — Designing Technologies to Frustrate
  • Madison Myers — Reworking and Making Kin in Jeff VanderMeer’s ‘Annihilation’
  • Roberta Restaino — Recoding Natural History
  • Minso Kim — Aura of Daylight

3:00—3:15 p.m. Coffee Break
3:15—4:45 p.m. Panel: Augmenting Environmental Discourse

  • Joanne Marras Tate, Warren Cook, Emily Loker: Suck the Anthropocene: Plastic Straws, Neoliberal Ideology and Environmental Action
  • Ashley Whipple & Maya Livio — Interdisciplinary Environmental Research: Lessons from the Field
  • Kelsey Simpkins: Art, the Arctic, and the Anthropocene: Effects of Contemporary Art on the Rights, Resources, and Resiliency of Arctic communities
  • Josh Westerman: After Denial: Right Wing Climate Realism and Its Implications

4:45—6:00 p.m. Dinner Break (dinner on own)

At CASE Building Auditorium:
6:00—7:30 p.m. Keynote: William L. Fox, Director, Center for Art + Environment

From the Anthropocene to the Anthroposcenic: Artists have responded to the global changes of the Anthropocene since the 1700s, their artworks evolving from cataloguing the world in painting and photography to interventions through performance and installation meant to counter existential ecological threats. The balance between aesthetics and functionality is key to the success and longevity of works across all these categories, from images in National Geographic to Land Art projects by Michael Heizer and Patricia Johanson.

Documenting Change exhibitions and programming are generously supported by CU Boulder's Grand Challenge: Our Space. Our Future., NEST (Nature, Environment, Science & Technology) Studio for the Arts, The Center for Western Thought and Policy, CU Boulder Student Arts and Cultural Enrichment fees, and CU Art Museum members.

  • Elliot Whitehead

1 person is interested in this event

User Activity

No recent activity