Your research will engage critically and creatively with environmental data (e.g., pollution data, biodiversity surveys, citizen science data, fossil and natural history collections at Museumfabriek, Natura Docet or Artis). This includes questioning what counts as ‘relevant’ environmental data, adding a critical artistic dimension to current academic debates around the politics of knowledge co-production and scientific research. You will develop multi-sensory ways of encountering and envisioning future scenarios that use environmental data to give voice to diverse species in ways that reclaim technology and the digital as critical immersive artistic practice. To this aim, you will explore different typologies of 'rurban' spaces across the Twente region (e.g., where rural-urban relationships illustrate climate and/or biodiversity related injustices) and conduct artistic experimentation with data and code. The focus will be on making frictions and controversies characteristic of different ‘rurban’ spaces and practices publicly debatable in experiential ways to support collective imagination of biodiverse and climate just futures. By taking a multispecies perspective, your research will place a relational understanding of ecology at the center of future speculative / immersive scenarios, which will be exhibited in the form of multi-sensory participatory installations. These installations may be developed in collaboration with artistic residencies and cultural organisations like Tetem - Platform for Digital Culture and Making Culture in Twente.
While these are the overall objectives for the PhD position, the exact scope of the research is open and can be refined by the PhD candidate together with the supervisory team and in collaboration with the wider JUST ART community. This includes academic partners as well as a network of artists, cultural institutions and societal partners across the Kingdom of the Netherlands.
This PhD position is part of
JUST ART. Creating Common Grounds for Climate Justice Through Artistic Research - a six-year project on climate justice and artistic research in the Caribbean and European parts of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. The project is funded by the Dutch Research Council (NWO) and led by the University of Groningen. It offers 10 fully funded PhD Positions at six universities in collaboration with Netherlands Organisation for Applied Scientific Research (TNO) and four universities of applied sciences. More information and links to all 10 PhD positions:
www.justart.infoThe complexity and scale of the climate crisis are overwhelming. Artistic practice and artistic research can open up new ways of understanding the intersectional dimensions of this crisis and empower people to act. Bringing together artists, researchers, campaigners and communities in rural and urban regions, JUST ART aims to cultivate diverse strategies of climate justice through artistic research and creative practice.
JUST ART PhD candidates will generate new knowledge and critically assess approaches that integrate scientific insights with artistic research to address climate justice. JUST ART PhDs will study and develop concrete cases to learn how art and artistic research can be embedded in ongoing and emerging work on climate justice. They will enhance expertise and skills to take artistic and art-based transformative action on climate justice and will contribute to theoretical frameworks, common methods, educational toolkits and knowledge sharing platforms in co-creation with project partners.