Welcome to ClimateCultures

"Where Have All The Birds Gone?"

“Where Have All The Birds Gone?”

Artist Michael Gresalfi shares an artwork that uses repurposed materials dating from before our mass communications 'information age' to witness the extensive decline of bird species and populations in his local area and the loss of natural spectacle. ...

Creative Responses to Our Nature & Climate Predicaments

ClimateCultures is an online space for creative minds to share responses to our ecological and climate predicaments. Launched in 2017, we are a growing network of artists, researchers and curators across the UK and around the world working across many practices, disciplines and spaces. Novelists, short story writers, performers, poets, playwrights, painters, composers, illustrators, photographers, filmmakers, sculptors, designers, digital artists, multimedia artists, gallery owners, online curators, creative producers, cultural activists, historians, biologists, archaeologists, geographers, environmental technologists, climate researchers — and more.

Scroll down to see a rich taster of our evolving content — all exclusively from our members: our regular blog, a showcase with short examples of creative work, a growing collection of longer essays, and several special series featuring themed content.

The ClimateCultures blog

You can see our current post above. We publish original content from one of our members on our blog every couple of weeks

We now have getting on for 200 posts so far, from 80 authors. You can find these under our Blog menu arranged by year or by our categories: * A History of the Anthropocene in 50 Objects * Art & Eco Activism * Challenges of Creative Engagement * Conversations * Creative Works * Cultural Change * Endangered Worlds * Environmental Change * Environmental Keywords * Gifts of Sound and Vision * In the Elements * Learning in the Anthropocene * Longer * Preview * Review * Signals from the Edge * Spaces * Speculative Worlds * Spiritual Ecology. And you can explore individual members by searching for ‘Authors’ in the ClimateCultures Members Directory. And in our sidebar you can see some of the popular posts and pages that people are reading right now.

Here are three more of our most recent posts. 

Planet Local -- Community and Connection

Planet Local — Community and Connection

Writer and filmmaker James Murray-White visited the Planet Local Summit, finding in its examples of urgent work around the world to foster being and acting locally a cultural turning towards nature as antidote to climate and ecological breakdown. ...
Giving Voice to the Nonhuman

Giving Voice to the Nonhuman

Photographer and writer Joan Sullivan shares her realisation that, no longer content to simply document climate change, a more fluid, non-linear visual language can evoke the nonhuman voice and reflect our own impermanence in a rapidly warming world. ...
Starting to See Waste as Art and Heritage

Starting to See Waste as Art and Heritage

Curator and writer Veronica Sekules introduces her special essay for our Longer feature, using GroundWork Gallery's recent exhibition to explore artists' roles in helping change how we value what we discard, viewing our waste as art and heritage. ...

And from this month in previous years…

Object-based Learning in the Anthropocene
14th December 2022

Object-based Learning in the Anthropocene

Geographer Martin Mahony introduces work with students using object-based learning to explore the material and intellectual challenges of thinking about human-environment relationships in our new planetary era -- and launches a new ClimateCultures feature: Museum of the Anthropocene. ...
Unfolding Stories from the Anthropocene and Beyond
14th December 2021

Unfolding Stories from the Anthropocene and Beyond

Artist Ivilina Kouneva draws on her seaside walks and art-making, on tales of indigenous story sharing and experiences of others' creativity to make imaginative links between our heritage as storytelling animals and remaking connections between past and future. ...
Owned by the Wood in Winter
31st December 2020

Owned by the Wood in Winter

ClimateCultures editor Mark Goldthorpe reviews The Wood in Winter, an illustrated essay by John Lewis-Stempel, and finds an elegant exploration of life -- wild nature and human -- in the harshest season, and an Anthropocene question: who owns ...
Showing cover of Skyseed novel on geonegineering
17th December 2020

Hacking the Earth

Curator and writer Rob La Frenais interviews scientist and fellow ClimateCultures member Bill McGuire about Skyseed. McGuire's novel explores geoengineering -- the ‘fix’ proposed by some as global heating's global solution. What on Earth could possibly go wrong?... ...
Urban Resilience? Art, the Missing Link
14th December 2019

Urban Resilience? Art, the Missing Link

Citizen Artist Yky explores urban resilience and the importance of building joint commitments by experts and artists to improve our understanding of this concept in 'citizen science' and other approaches to empower citizens in planning for the future. ...
Earthrise, seen from Apollo 8, 24th December 1968
31st December 2018

Earthrise

For Gifts of Sound & Vision, Mark Goldthorpe chooses Earthrise -- a film about a moment a half-century ago that transformed our vision of the world and what might be possible in this short historic episode, modern human civilisation. ...
Anthropocene objects
19th December 2018

The Mirrored Ones

ClimateCultures editor Mark Goldthorpe reviews Future Remains: A Cabinet of Curiosities for the Anthropocene. This book's objects offer a mirror test for our 'Age of Human' -- and conceptual links to A History of the Anthropocene in 50 Objects. ...
Grief and hope in the face of environmental crisis Photograph: Tim Hayes/Ende Gelände 2018
12th December 2018

Sweeping the Dust

Writer and photographer Mike Hembury read Deborah Tomkins’ post on how grief and hope feature in the work of fellow 'climate writers', and shares a poem in response to his own research into these experiences under climate change. ...

More creative content from our members

Alongside our blog, we also use our Creative Showcase to share short insights into our members’ work. Our latest showcase items are:

Drawing on Water

Drawing on Water

Artist James Aldridge gives a short video tour of his recent Drawing on Water exhibition. This brought together artworks that emerged out of the Queer River arts-based research project he set up in 2020, using an audiovisual installation and his 'Walking Pages' to look at his individual, embodied relationship with a range of local wetlands. ...
Songs for Earth

Songs for Earth

Through his songs, writer Peter Reason explores many rich themes: grief, rage and despair at our ecological catastrophe; beauty and wonder at the world; deep participation in life on Earth, and taking seriously the panpsychic and animist perspective that the world is alive, sentient and speaks to us, if only we will attend and listen. ...
Picked Up the First Pieces

Picked Up the First Pieces

Artist and writer Ursula Troche showcases a video using washed-up discarded fishing rope, recovered and stitched together, to explore the growing threat of 'ghost gear' and the haunting of our seas by plastic waste. Picked Up the First Pieces has become the start of a series of video works using imagination to tell plastic stories. ...

And we have a small but growing library of extended essays in our Longer feature:

Veronica Sekules: The Art and Heritage of Waste

Veronica Sekules: The Art and Heritage of Waste

In this original essay for ClimateCultures, art curator and writer Veronica Sekules draws on work at her GroundWork Gallery to counter prevailing cultures of extractivism and look at how mobilising creativity can help us rehabilitate waste as a transformative resource in ways that could ultimately mean 'waste' no longer makes sense as a category at all. ...
Deep Mappings - Iain Biggs

Iain Biggs: Open Deep Mappings Today – a Personal Introduction

In this original essay for ClimateCultures, artist and researcher Iain Biggs introduces the concept of open deep mapping as partial, creative explorations sharing a conversational orientation to place that has value in times of social and environmental upheaval: "an open-ended process, something both much more inclusive than attempted by cartography and much harder to describe." ...
Jemma Jacobs: The Visuality of the Flint Water Crisis

Jemma Jacobs: The Visuality of the Flint Water Crisis

In her essay on the Flint Water Crisis, arts researcher Jemma Jacobs explores visual culture and its value in exposing environmental racism. Her case study of the Flint Water Crisis looks at the work of photographer LaToya Ruby Frazier, capturing the strength and endurance of a struggling community to draw our focus toward marginalised experiences ...

Special themed series

As well as these regular features, we run special series on particular themes, gathering creative content and thoughts across a topic, such as our Quarantine Connection series during the first Covid-19 lockdowns of 2020, and our exploration during 2022 of three Environmental Keywords — ‘Justice’, ‘Resilience’ and ‘Transitions’ — as part of a project by the University of Bristol’s Centre for Environmental Humanities.

And we’re pleased to host an online Museum of the Anthropocene, bringing a selection of the objects nominated by students on the University of East Anglia’s 3rd-year undergraduate course, Human Geography in the Anthropocene.

Some of the contributions to the Museum of the Anthropocene

Many of our regular blog posts are responses to our creative invitations, such as A History of the Anthropocene in 50 Objects, Gifts of Sound and Vision, and Signals from the Edge. You’ll find these collected under our Curious Minds menu, alongside the Quarantine Connection and Environmental Keywords series.

Explore, comment and share

ClimateCultures is an approach to building creative conversations between and beyond different appreciations of what the climate and ecological predicaments of our times mean, and what they offer us as ways forward. It’s a beginning.

Do explore our archive, use the comment features to join the conversation, and let others know about us.

How ClimateCultures began, What we’re about & Who we are

You can find more about the initiative’s genesis and context in our About pages: About our platform, About the global predicaments we focus on, About our Members. The ClimateCultures Members Directory gives links to each of our artists, researchers and curators and the work they are doing and the posts and other content they share here on our site.

A New Sun’ – Olafur Eliasson’s ‘The Weather Project’ at Tate Modern, 2003 Photographer: Mark Goldthorpe © 2003 markgoldthorpe.net