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Lisa Blackmore: How to Eat a Polluted River? Curatorial Practice, Metabolic Literacies, and Cultures of Care
How to Eat a Polluted River? Curatorial Practice, Metabolic Literacies, and Cultures of Care
(p. 109 – 140)

Lisa Blackmore

How to Eat a Polluted River? Curatorial Practice, Metabolic Literacies, and Cultures of Care

PDF, 32 pages

  • global ecology
  • artistic practice
  • ecology

My language
English

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English

Lisa Blackmore

Lisa Blackmore is senior lecturer in art history and interdisciplinary studies at the University of Essex. She is the founder-director of entre—ríos, a confluence of arts research, curatorial, editorial, and pedagogical projects that explores continuities between bodies of water, human bodies, and territories, recognizing rivers as active subjects that produce aesthetic forms, transform landscapes and shape memory. In 2023, Lisa was a British Academy Mid-Career for her project “Imagining the Hydrocommons: Water, Art and Infrastructure in Latin America.” She has published Spectacular Modernity: Dictatorship, Space and Visuality in Venezuela (University of Pittsburgh Press, 2017) and co-edited Hydrocommons Cultures: Art, Pedagogy and Cultures of Care in the Americas (LA ESCUELA_, 2024), Liquid Ecologies in Latin American and Caribbean Arts (Routledge, 2020), and Natura: Environmental Aesthetics After Landscape (diaphanes, 2018) among other books. Lisa received her MA Latin American Cultural Studies and PhD Spanish from Birkbeck College.
Other texts by Lisa Blackmore for DIAPHANES
Liliana Gómez (ed.), Fabienne Liptay (ed.): Eco-operations

Liliana Gómez (ed.), Fabienne Liptay (ed.)

Eco-operations

Softcover, 336 pages

PDF, 336 pages

The climate change crisis has become part of aesthetic discourse and critical research in culture and the arts. Future-oriented, ecologically conceived possibilities for action are being explored by artists, curators, and scholars alike. Eco-operations addresses these emerging aesthetic ecologies and new technologies of cooperation that both challenge and shape a sustainable future, foregrounding interruptions, ruptures, disconnections, dissonances, exclusions, and allochronism. Moving beyond the concepts of “flow” and “network” as a single, coherent (ecological or technological) system, Eco-operations instead emphasizes the frictions within asynchronously running systems. The infrastructures and formats of artistic production and exhibition play a central role here, as they themselves constitute ecosystems that invite and regulate processes of sharing and exchange. Artists and activists are embedded in these ecosystems, in which they simultaneously intervene when searching for alternative ways of creating collaborative practice. Bringing together scholars, artists, writers, and curators, and working across a range of disciplines, Eco-operations explores this field of tension between global and local ecologies, and aims to speculate on where dissonances imply both creative potential and political challenges.

 

With contributions by Dalida María Benfield, Ursula Biemann, Lisa Blackmore, T. J. Demos, Laura Flórez & Lorena García Cely, Sandra ­Frimmel, Alexandra Gelis, Liliana Gómez, ­Fabienne ­Liptay, Ana María Lozano, Uriel Orlow, Dorota Sajewska.

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