Future Gardens as Eco-Cultural Collaborations
Schedule
Sat Nov 23 2024 at 02:00 pm to 04:00 pm
UTC-08:00Location
Mandeville Art Gallery | San Diego, CA
About this Event
The Harrisons describe their first Future Garden, the Garden of Hot Winds and Warm Rains (1995), proposed for a museum in Bonn as “...a multi-layered story told with artifacts, media events, texts, and living materials, which all together engage the probable Greenhouse future directly. It is a work of art that will be garden, prediction, and promenade, a voyage of sorts... The task we set for this work is the exploration of eco-cultural collaborations that would make for a future no longer based on extraction. ... these gardens look at what a future could be like if conscious, mutually beneficial collaborations between human cultures (civilizations in all their complexities) and the cultures of nature (the life webs complicating and diversifying up to the space and energy available) became a norm.”
What does this multi-layered story look and feel like in the present?
Join us for a panel discussion with people who have collaborated with the Harrisons on Future Gardens including current on the ground proposals. The panel is moderated by Anne Douglas and Chris Fremantle. Featured speakers include:
- Josh Harrison, son of Helen and Newton and currently director of the Center for the Study of the Force Majeure at UC Santa Cruz.
- Laura and Benny Filmore, Elders of the Washoe Tribe who worked with Helen and Newton Harrison on the Future Garden at Sagehen and continue to advise that project.
- Barbara Benish, artist and Advisor to the United Nations who is developing a Future Garden at ArtMill in the Czech Republic.
Barbara Benish is a California-born artist, who moved from Los Angeles to Prague in 1992 as a Fulbright scholar. She founded ArtMill (est.2004) in rural Bohemia (Nalžovské Hory, in the Czech Republic), an international eco-art center. From 2010-2015 she served as Advisor for U.N.E.P. in Arts & Outreach, and since 2015 is a Fellow at the Social Practice Arts Research Center, (University of California, Santa Cruz). Benish is developing a Future Garden under the project title “Transformative Territories: Inter-Species Refuge” at ArtMill. Benish has worked with and written about the Harrisons.
Joshua Harrison is a filmmaker, environmentalist and educator. After a lifetime of connection to their process, principles, and outcomes, he began working directly with his parents Helen and Newton Harrison in 2012 to support strategy, large projects and overall development for the Center for the Study of the Force Majeure at UC Santa Cruz. He became Director following the recent death of Newton Harrison in 2022. Josh has been engaged in the intersection of art and ecology since participating in middle school demonstrations on the first Earth Day in 1970. His work centers around bringing together artists, scientists, engineers, planners and visionaries to design regenerative systems and policies that address issues raised by global temperature rise at the scale that they present.
Laura Fillmore is an artist and community organizer whose current work includes collaborating with artists and firefighters around reintroducing cultural fire on the landscape with the BOD for the Center for the Force Majeure, establishing a community makerspace, and working on a community-led futurist curriculum as part of her focus on directing the Woodfords Indian Education Center, a California Office of Education wrap-around program offering an integrated program of indigenous arts and culture, rigorous academic instruction, recreation, and anti-racist, community-based social justice.
Benny Fillmore served on the founding board of directors for Wà:šiw Wagayay Mangal “House Where Wà:šiw is Spoken,” a language immersion school run by Wà:šiw “itlu Gawgayay,” a non-profit founded by the Wàši:šiw “Washoe People from Here.” He founded Demlu ‘uli Mongil, on the Dresslerville Ranch, and stewards it still. He was recently appointed to the Washoe Cultural Resources Advisory Board (WCRAC); a board of culturally competent Elders who make decisions about what the Washoe Tribe will honor (or avoid) in regards to the work of educators, cultural workers and the Tribal Historic Preservation Officer (THPO). A ceremonial leader, Benny is often asked for his help by others when healing is needed. A traditional singer, he is currently working on bringing back Wà:šiw songs and teaching his sons and grandchildren for the future, and contributing to the work of The Center for the Force Majeure in forests and future gardens on his homelands.
Moderators:
Anne Douglas is Professor Emerita, Gray’s School of Art, Robert Gordon University, Scotland, exploring the changing place of the artist in public life. This research has increasingly focused on art and the environmental crisis from a practice-led research perspective. She co-produced the Harrisons’ work “On the Deep Wealth of this Nation, Scotland” (2017) in collaboration with Newton Harrison and the Centre for the Study of the Force Majeure, University of California Santa Cruz.
Chris Fremantle is a researcher and producer of award-winning projects. He was producer on the Harrisons’ project “Greenhouse Britain: Losing Ground, Gaining Wisdom.” He is a longstanding member of the international ecoart network and co-editor of “Ecoart in Action,” a collection of activities, case studies and provocations drawn from the network. He lectures at Gray’s School of Art, Robert Gordon University, Scotland.
https://mandevilleartgallery.ucsd.edu/events/index.html
Where is it happening?
Mandeville Art Gallery, 9390 Mandeville Lane, San Diego, United StatesEvent Location & Nearby Stays:
USD 0.00