Dominik, you might consider the following revisions to the text below:
WHERE: Oslo's botanical gardens, the site of the new Climate House to be opened in 2020;
Morien Rees ICOM's Working Group on Sustainability;
Henry McGhie Curating Tomorrow Manchester;
Molly Fannon CEO the Museum of the United Nations, Copenhagen
... will take place at the site of the new Climate House at Oslo's Botanical Gardens
Could I suggest that we prepare a call for papers text that can be viewed in word /pdf format with the logo of UiO & names of the faculties together with ICOM NORGE before sending it out internationally.
Hilsen Morien
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From: Dominik Collet <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Friday, July 5, 2019 12:17:44 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Cc: Brita Brenna; Bergsveinn Thorsson; Morien Rees
Subject: CFP: Int. Workshop: Curating Climate. Museums as ‘contact zones’ of climate research, education and activism - Oslo, 10/2019
Subject: Event: Int. Workshop "Curating climate. Museums as ‘contact zones’ of climate research, education and activism
WHEN: October 28-29th 2019
WHERE: Klimahuset / University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway
WHO: People working in the museum and heritage sector, researchers, artists, activists and policy makers.
PROGRAM DESCRIPTION:
How do we narrate climatic change in a museum environment and initiate dialogue across its stakeholders? How can museums become ‘contact zones’ where science and education, activism and entertainment, debate and tourism interact productively?
Various cultural institutions have recently taken up the challenges of communicating climate change and engaging with their communities. They range from established museums to new, emerging and experimental spaces. All attempt to promote debate and tell the stories we desperately need to connect scientific results to human lifeworlds. Climate change is a complex phenomenon that crosses the register of nature and culture. Its ecological, cultural and technological impacts connect the global and the local. The importance of addressing climate breakdown in a global perspective reflecting the different challenges facing different regions makes museums revisit their collections, exhibition designs and expert networks as well as develop their cross-societal appeal. Under these challenging terms, they could provide a readymade infrastructure for climate change communication and co-creation as spaces for the intersection of climate research, dissemination and activism.
This workshop will explore the emerging, dynamic and transgressive field of the ‘climate museum’. It will trace a unique and highly interdisciplinary space of encounter that connects the sciences and the humanities, academic and public spheres, research and action. What are the competences museums need to develop in order to engage with the multiscalar and complex phenomenon? Do we need new institutions or are established museums capable of rethinking their approaches and use their resources to foster understanding and action to engage with the global environmental crisis? Should the focus be on the sustainable development goals, the Agenda 2030, climate change or even the Anthropocene? The workshop will initiate cross-sectoral collaboration within and beyond the museum sphere. It is aimed at people working in the museum and heritage sector, researchers, artists, activists and policy makers. It will engage a wide variety of approaches in museum theory and practice for competence building. It strives to make museums key actors in promoting understanding and action to climate change. Confirmed key speakers are: Henry McGhie (Manchester) and Molly Fannon (Washington).
We invite contributions to areas such as:
* Exhibiting/Narrating climate change
* Collecting climate
* Anthropocenic museum practices
* Bridging science, activism and education
* Aesthetic, didactic, and material strategies
* Contact and conflict zones of climate/museums
* Co-creation in multi-stakeholder environments
* Curating for societal change
* Climate - a challenge for new or old museums?
Organisers: Prof Brita Brenna (University of Oslo), Prof Dominik Collet (Oslo School of Environmental Humanities), Torkjell Leira (Klimahuset Oslo), Morien Rees (ICOM group sustainability and museums), Bergsveinn Thorsson (University of Oslo)
HOW TO APPLY:
The international workshop will take place in Oslo new Klimahuset and is free of charge. Subject to pending funding agreements, travel grants might be available for some applicants. Please send your one-page summary of your presentation and short CV by 15th August 2019 to: [log in to unmask]<mailto:[log in to unmask]>
APPLICATION DEADLINE:
August 15th 2019
Please share widely among your professional networks.
--
Prof. Dr. Dominik Collet
Department of Archaeology, Conservation and History
University of Oslo
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