Art Sci Salon Friday Nov 3. 530-7pm

SR
Siddharth Ramakrishnan
Sun, Oct 29, 2023 4:32 AM

Hi everyone!

We are excited to host the Flow: Art and Ecology conference. While
the event goes from Nov 3-4 (details below), you can attend an Art+Science
symposium on Decolonizing Land's Imaginary, Friday Nov 3, 530-7pm in
the Kittredge Gallery!
Prof Richman will moderate a panel including Prof Rachel De Motts, Prof
Renee Simms and our visiting sci-artist Prof. Banu Subramaniam

Come join us!

Siddharth
[image: Flow.png]

Flow: Art and Ecology in a Changing Climate is a two day symposium at the
University of Puget Sound on November 3-4, 2023. The symposium includes an
affiliated Kittredge Gallery exhibition, In the Flow: Art, Ecology, and
Pedagogy
.

The exhibit features the work of nine artists and collaborative teams
working in the Salish Sea Watershed and Columbia River Basin. The artworks
explore how land and place can help us connect and build new kinds of
relationships in the face of accelerated climate change.

The symposium includes workshops, and facilitated conversations and
presentations that engage with place/land based ways of knowing around the
Columbia River basin and Salish Sea while contending with climate change.
Nine individuals, listed below, co-organized this two day gathering,
integrating reflection, discussion, and hands on interactive programming.

*Flow *explores ways to integrate, embody, and enact intersections between
art and ecology through direct engagement with matter and materials such as
dyes, pigments, and mycelium, multi-sensory guided walks, reflection on
positionality and place, and critical examination of language and
classification’s role in creating a sense of place and displacement.
Guiding themes and questions include:

·      What is the role of the artist as healer and maker in navigating
this current moment?

·      How can approaches to reparative work and re-imagining be taught
through creative practices?

·      How can place/land based knowledge teach us how to connect and
build relationships?

·      How do we practice remediation and utilize loss?

Further information and context can be found here
https://placebasedthinking.com/.

Flow: Art and Ecology in the Time of Global Warming co-organizers:

Melonie Ancheta, Director Pigments Revealed International, researcher,
artist, educator

Natalie Baloy, Assistant Professor of Cultural Anthropology, Western
Washington University

Cynthia Camlin, Professor, Art and Art History, Western Washington,
University

Heidi Gustafson, artist and ochre specialist

Beverly Naidus, Emerita Professor of Interdisciplinary Studio Arts,
University of Washington, Tacoma

Daniela Naomi Molnar, independent artist and poet

Matt Reynolds, Associate Professor of Art History, Whitman College

Elise Richman, Professor Art and Art History, University of Puget Sound

Cara Tomlinson, Professor Art, Lewis and Clark College

Additional Participants:

Rachel DeMotts, Professor, Environmental Policy and Decision Making,
University of Puget Sound

Dann Disciglio, Visiting Professor of Digital Media, Lewis and Clark
College

Amanda Leigh Evans, Visiting Assistant Professor, Art, Whitman College

Cleo Wölfle Hazard, Assistant Professor School of Marine and Environmental
Affairs, University of Washington

Yixuan Pan, Assistant Professor of Interdisciplinary Studio Arts,
University of Washington, Tacoma

Sasha Petrenko, Assistant Professor of Sculpture and Expanded Media,
Western Washington University

Renee Simms, Associate Professor & Leadership Team Member, African American
Studies, and the Race and Pedagogy Institute, University of Puget Sound

Robert Yerachmiel Sniderman, Assistant Professor in Socially Engaged Art,
Fairhaven College of Interdisciplinary Studies, Western Washington
University + Visiting Professor, Institut für Kunst im Kontext, Universität
der Künste Berlin (2023-24)

Banu Subramanium, Professor & Chair, Women’s and Gender Studies,
Wellesley College

Arianne True, Washington State Poet Laureate (Choctaw, Chickasaw)

Lewis and Clark Art and Ecology course students: Sophie Abbassian, Miriam
Baena, Summer Dae Binder, Owen Clark, Allison Clarke, Mallory Dubois, Margo
Gaillard, Liv Ladaire, Gillian Largay, Paloma Richeson, Gabriel Rosenfield,
Stella Scheffer, Anthi Sklavenitis, Ezequiel Walker, Lila Ward, and Aiden
Wilkson

Western Washington Art and Ecology Students

--

Siddharth Ramakrishnan, PhD
Jennie M Caruthers Chair in Neuroscience
Professor, Biology
University of Puget Sound

*Tacoma, WA *
sramakrishnan@pugetsound.edu sramakrishnan@pugetsound.edu
253-879-2698

Hi everyone! We are excited to host the *Flow: Art and Ecology* conference. While the event goes from Nov 3-4 (details below), you can attend an Art+Science symposium on *Decolonizing Land's Imaginary,* *Friday Nov 3, 530-7pm* in the Kittredge Gallery! Prof Richman will moderate a panel including Prof Rachel De Motts, Prof Renee Simms and our visiting sci-artist Prof. Banu Subramaniam Come join us! Siddharth [image: Flow.png] *Flow: Art and Ecology in a Changing Climate* is a two day symposium at the University of Puget Sound on November 3-4, 2023. The symposium includes an affiliated Kittredge Gallery exhibition, *In the Flow: Art, Ecology, and Pedagogy*. The exhibit features the work of nine artists and collaborative teams working in the Salish Sea Watershed and Columbia River Basin. The artworks explore how land and place can help us connect and build new kinds of relationships in the face of accelerated climate change. The symposium includes workshops, and facilitated conversations and presentations that engage with place/land based ways of knowing around the Columbia River basin and Salish Sea while contending with climate change. Nine individuals, listed below, co-organized this two day gathering, integrating reflection, discussion, and hands on interactive programming. *Flow *explores ways to integrate, embody, and enact intersections between art and ecology through direct engagement with matter and materials such as dyes, pigments, and mycelium, multi-sensory guided walks, reflection on positionality and place, and critical examination of language and classification’s role in creating a sense of place and displacement. Guiding themes and questions include: · What is the role of the artist as healer and maker in navigating this current moment? · How can approaches to reparative work and re-imagining be taught through creative practices? · How can place/land based knowledge teach us how to connect and build relationships? · How do we practice remediation and utilize loss? Further information and context can be found here <https://placebasedthinking.com/>. Flow: Art and Ecology in the Time of Global Warming co-organizers: *Melonie Ancheta*, Director Pigments Revealed International, researcher, artist, educator *Natalie Baloy*, Assistant Professor of Cultural Anthropology, Western Washington University *Cynthia Camlin*, Professor, Art and Art History, Western Washington, University *Heidi Gustafson*, artist and ochre specialist *Beverly Naidus*, Emerita Professor of Interdisciplinary Studio Arts, University of Washington, Tacoma *Daniela Naomi Molnar*, independent artist and poet *Matt Reynolds*, Associate Professor of Art History, Whitman College *Elise Richman*, Professor Art and Art History, University of Puget Sound *Cara Tomlinson*, Professor Art, Lewis and Clark College Additional Participants: *Rachel DeMotts*, Professor, Environmental Policy and Decision Making, University of Puget Sound *Dann Disciglio*, Visiting Professor of Digital Media, Lewis and Clark College *Amanda Leigh Evans*, Visiting Assistant Professor, Art, Whitman College Cleo Wölfle Hazard, Assistant Professor School of Marine and Environmental Affairs, University of Washington *Yixuan Pan*, Assistant Professor of Interdisciplinary Studio Arts, University of Washington, Tacoma *Sasha Petrenko*, Assistant Professor of Sculpture and Expanded Media, Western Washington University Renee Simms, Associate Professor & Leadership Team Member, African American Studies, and the Race and Pedagogy Institute, University of Puget Sound *Robert Yerachmiel Sniderman*, Assistant Professor in Socially Engaged Art, Fairhaven College of Interdisciplinary Studies, Western Washington University + Visiting Professor, Institut für Kunst im Kontext, Universität der Künste Berlin (2023-24) *Banu Subramanium*, Professor & Chair, Women’s and Gender Studies, Wellesley College *Arianne True*, Washington State Poet Laureate (Choctaw, Chickasaw) Lewis and Clark Art and Ecology course students: *Sophie Abbassian, Miriam Baena, Summer Dae Binder, Owen Clark, Allison Clarke, Mallory Dubois, Margo Gaillard, Liv Ladaire, Gillian Largay, Paloma Richeson, Gabriel Rosenfield, Stella Scheffer, Anthi Sklavenitis, Ezequiel Walker, Lila Ward, and Aiden Wilkson* Western Washington Art and Ecology Students -- ---------------------- *Siddharth Ramakrishnan, PhD* *Jennie M Caruthers Chair in Neuroscience* *Professor, Biology* *University of Puget Sound* *Tacoma, WA * *sramakrishnan@pugetsound.edu <sramakrishnan@pugetsound.edu>* *253-879-2698*