艺术与环境行动,一次一只鸟

Cameron Cartiere
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引用次数: 0

摘要

气候变化和物种减少的环境问题会让人感到难以承受。个人常常不知所措,质疑自己到底能产生什么影响。通过chART项目,我们见证了社区参与艺术作为环境行动和对当地生态系统影响的直接途径所产生的巨大影响。在第27届国际鸟类大会期间,来自世界各地的鸟类爱好者将注意力集中在加拿大温哥华。这篇文章是对chART如何利用这种集会的反思,创造了一个雄心勃勃的冒险,旨在对公众与城市鸟类的关系产生可持续的影响。“乌鸦飞”是一个公共艺术项目,将城市鸟类的创造性联系直接带到公众手中。作品包括现场雕塑、社区参与干预、投影、工作坊、表演和6000只陶瓷乌鸦。chART的创始人Cameron Cartiere一直在与一个跨学科团队合作,通过边境自由蜜蜂来解决传粉媒介的流失问题。该研究项目利用基于环境的艺术来吸引社区采取积极行动,以改善传粉媒介的条件,并取得了巨大的成功。《乌鸦飞》采用了类似的方法来强调鸟类物种的消失,以及个体可以采取的行动来提高它们有羽毛的邻居的生存几率。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Art and Environmental Action, One Bird at a Time
The environmental problems of climate change and species decline can feel overwhelming. Individuals are often at a loss, questioning what impact they can actually have. Through chART Projects, we have witnessed the dramatic effect of community-engaged art as a direct path to environmental action and impact on local ecosystems. During the 27thInternational Ornithological Congress, bird enthusiasts from around the world focused their attention on Vancouver, Canada. This article is a reflection on how chART took advantage of this assembly, creating an ambitious venture aiming for a sustainable effect on the public’s relationship to urban birds. As the Crow Flies was a public art project bringing creative connections to urban birds directly into the hands of the public. Works included sited-sculpture, community-engaged interventions, projections, workshops, performances, and 6,000 ceramic crows. chART’s founder, Cameron Cartiere has been working with an interdisciplinary team to address the loss of pollinators through Border Free Bees. That research project used environment-based art to engage communities to take positive action in order to improve conditions for pollinators, with tremendous success. As the Crow Flies took a similar approach to highlight the loss of bird species and actions individuals could take to improve the odds for their feathered neighbours.
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