Practice-led researcher: ART | CLIMATE | FUTURES
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ART | CLIMATE EMERGENCY | FUTURES

 

ART | CLIMATE EMERGENCY | FUTURES

REFUGIUM (2021) BY JEN RAE + CLAIRE G. COLEMAN

It’s 2042 and Claire is past her use-by date. She knows apocalypse and doesn’t want another groundhog day.

Refugium is a short film of speculative fiction in the climate emergency context, by artist-researcher Jen Rae (Métis) and author Claire G. Coleman (Noongar). Centred on First Nations knowledge and protocols, Refugium hacks time and compounding existential crises, delves into moral dilemmas of life and death and hones in on child-centered trauma prevention and intergenerational justice in the coming collapse. What are the conversations that we aren’t having now that might aid us, our loved ones and our future ancestors? What are the skills and knowledges at the thresholds of being forever lost, overlooked or undervalued that our future generations may need for survival? What are we willing to give up and/or fight for in the greatest challenge facing humanity?

This view from the future is a final call to act – to imagine and create a world that should have been - prior to colonial disruption.

A winner of the Incinerator Art Award 2021: Art for Social Change

It is an extraordinary work that is part futuristic, part apocalyptic, and we love the way these two elders of our community if you want, rethink the past and the future
— Incinerator Art Gallery Award judges comments
 

PORTAGE: RAFT | FLOTILLA | SHELTER2CAMP (2019-2021) - UPDATES IN PROGRESS

 

FIRST ASSEMBLY OF THE CENTRE FOR REWORLDING (2021)

 

REFUGE 2016 - 2022

This is NOT a drill - Produced by Arts House (Melbourne), REFUGE was a multi-year (2016-2022) transdisciplinary project between artists, emergency management professionals, local government, Indigenous and local communities, and academics exploring the role of artists and arts organisations in climate-related disaster preparedness. Central to this work is Isabelle Stenger’s concept of the ‘cosmopolitical’, how de-centering fact-sharing with values-alignment creates more meaningful participation, and how speculative approaches activate the public imagination informing feedback loops of research, policy and creative practice in the REFUGE project. 
Every disaster is different. Every community is different. Therefore, every action in disaster preparedness, response and recovery is context specific. Each year, new questions were explored in depth as we collectively determine the imagined scenario and what we will practice together. 

Photo credit: Emma Byrnes

 

READY STEADY GO (2020), JEN RAE + EMMA BYRNES

Imagine the unimaginable. How prepared are you and your community in the event of a major disaster event? What if you call 000 and no one came for 48-72 hours? Ready, Steady, Go is an online practical guide and repository of what ifs and what fors in case of emergency. Centred around the ‘emergency kit’, you’ll find fun and not-so-fun facts, questions, prompts, tips and hacks to imagine, prepare and plan in case of emergency.

Photo credit: Emma Byrnes

 

2130 SLEEPWALKING INTO EXTINCTION

Other Sights in partnership with Sydney Festival and Tribal Warrior presented the future is floating in January, 2020. Canadian and Australian artists were brought together in a two-week-long exchange residency speculating on floating futures. On 22 January 2020, artists Venessa Possum (Dharug Dharawal), Syrus Marcus Ware (Black, from Turtle Island), Claire G. Coleman (Noongar), and Jen Rae (Métis) performed experimental works exploring what it might mean to be at the end of the world. Speaking to us from the future, Jen Rae performed 2130 Sleepwalking into Extinction, a performance lecture including the broadcasting of Evacuate to the audience as the Tribal Warrior’s Mari Nawi floated by Prime Minister Scott Morrison’s residence Kirribili House.

Photo credit: Rafaela Pandolfini

 

EXPERIMENTAL TIMES - Summer Issue, November 2029, Editorial, Jen Rae

We live in experimental times.

Jen Rae was a 2020 Moderator in Alex Kelly and David Pledger’s Assembly for the Future - a series of participatory, digital gatherings in which the public create new visions for the future. Assembly #2 Dispatches from the Future - are generated by the Future-Builders, cross-pollinated with Scott Ludlam’s provocation, stimulated by responses from Santilla Chingaipe and Roj Amedi and realised by an ensemble of Moderators and Artists.

Experimental Times is a future generated by Jess, Jacqueline, Gabrielle, Kata and Jen.

 

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****This dispatch of speculative fiction was one of the kernels that led to the making of REFUGIUM and the real-life formation of the Centre for Reworlding in 2021.**** This is not the actual centre for Reworlding.

THE CENTRE FOR REWORLDING - UMBILICA HOMEPAGE

Posted: 18 December, 2029

Entry by Jen Rae

Jen Rae was a 2020 Moderator in Alex Kelly and David Pledger’s Assembly for the Future - a series of participatory, digital gatherings in which the public create new visions for the future. These Dispatches from the Future are generated by the Assembly #1 Future-Builders, cross-pollinated with Claire G Coleman’s provocation, stimulated by responses from Anne Manne and Ruth De Souza and realized by an ensemble of Moderators and Artists.

The Centre for Reworlding - Umbilica Homepage is a future generated by Jen and Bron.

 
JEN RAE

FUTURE PROOF SURVIVAL GUIDE

The term ‘future proof’ is a process of anticipating the future and developing methods to minimise the impacts of shocks and stresses in relation to these predicted events (Rich, 2016). It is predominantly used in the fields of architecture and urban planning, medicine, design and technology applied to infrastructure and systems. However, increasingly it has become more common in educational and environmental communications. I suspect this is because it has greater meaning and resonance than discipline specific terms such as ‘adaptation’ and ‘mitigation’. As an artist, I use the term as a conversation starter to disrupt ‘future blindness’[1] and to position audiences to consider impending climate change impacts in more relatable terms. For instance, ‘what am I going to eat if food becomes scarce where I live?’ or the question asked in the Future Proof Survival Guide project, ‘What do you know that you don’t know that you know, that we might all need to know in a disaster?’. [1] Future blindness’ is a term used by Lorenzoni et. al (2007) in ‘Barriers perceived to engaging with climate change among the UK public and their policy implications’ to explain the inability for people to perceive a future beyond 10 years.
Rich, B.D. (2014). The Principles of Future-Proofing: A Broader Understanding of Resiliency in Historic Built Environment. Preservation Education and Research, 7, 31-49.

 

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RATION REWARDS

The Ration Rewards cards were created in 2016 for Fair Share Fare’s Food Store at Arts House for the inaugural REFUGE project, where artists, community and emergency services rehearsed a flood scenario.

Drawn from a wide variety of resources such as the City of Melbourne’s archives on WWII rationing and austerity measures, survival guides and settler cookbooks, the suite of cards are intended to offer alternative thinking around self-sufficiency and food provisioning in times of scarcity.

Photo credit: Emma Byrnes

 
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DEAR VIVI

The powerful word ‘REMATRIATION’ – a word Indigenous Women of Turtle Island use - is a spiritual way of life that recenters respect and care for Mother Earth and kinship relationships between each other and all life forms.
The climate emergency urgently calls upon us reconcile our colonial histories and decentre dominant narratives of the patriarchy.
How do we do this as mothers, parents and within our kinship networks?

 

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EKO DRUM

The original Ekodrum was created during the final years of the Australian Millennium Drought, regarded as the worst drought since colonial disruption. Low rainfall, water trading, poor land and water management practices of the Murray-Darling basin and population growth led to the construction of six major seawater desalination plants to provide major cities with drinking water.

In 2017, the Ekodrum was recreated in collaboration for Latai Taumoepeau’s performances:

  • Archipela-Go, 30 June 2017
    Art Bar, Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney

  • Odyssey 'o Fehuluni 
    The Asia Pacific Triennial (APT9), QAGOMA, Brisbane, QLD, 2019

 
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MAIN ATTRACTION QINGDAO

The polar bear - the world’s largest and fiercest land predator, used to be emblematic of the cold. But today, it is a symbol of warmth. Images of polar bears, such as Arne Naevra’s Polar Meltdown (2007) of a polar bear teetering on a small piece of ice, have been photographed, illustrated, produced, reproduced, misappropriated, circulated and re-circulated-continuously with minimal contest or understanding of the effect.
As the atmosphere inches toward a potential +2 ̊C temperature increase, the polar bear as a ubiquitous icon of climate change has prevailed and now peaked. Main Attraction is a video, a part of an ongoing project, that explores the problematics of selecting this animal from a specific geographic region to represent a global phenomenon, one that is highly complex and human.

 
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I acknowledge the Boon Wurrung, Wurrundjeri and Dja Dja Wurrung people as the Traditional Custodians of the unceded lands where I live, create, collaborate and work. I celebrate their enduring connections to Country, knowledge, community and story. I pay my deepest respect and gratitude to their Elders past and present for their wisdom, guidance and generosity.

As we share practices between art, environment, community, activism and futures…may we together reflect and pay our deepest respect to all First Nations Elders, both past and present, here and abroad, as it is their living culture and experiences that hold the key to the success of future generations.

Marsee. JR