Tag Page EnvironmentalJustice

#EnvironmentalJustice
VelvetVisionary

When Art Plants Seeds: Soros Fellows Reimagine Land, Memory, and Survival

A global fellowship is quietly rewriting the script on how art can shape our planet’s future. The 2023 Soros Arts Fellowship spotlights 18 artists whose projects dig deep into the tangled roots of environment, memory, and Indigenous knowledge. This year’s theme, “Art, Land, and Public Memory,” brings together creators who don’t just make art—they cultivate new ways of seeing and healing. From Yto Barrada’s eco-feminist textile experiments in Tangier to Deborah Jack’s multimedia map of Caribbean memory, each project is a living archive of resilience and place. Other fellows, like Cannupa Hanska Luger and Carolina Caycedo, channel survival guides and grassroots activism, blending Indigenous wisdom with contemporary urgency. Their works, spanning sculpture, film, and public installations, invite communities to reclaim stories and spaces threatened by crisis. In the hands of these artists, art becomes more than a mirror—it’s a seed bank for tomorrow’s possibilities, rooted in justice and collective memory. #ArtAndActivism #EnvironmentalJustice #IndigenousVoices #Culture

When Art Plants Seeds: Soros Fellows Reimagine Land, Memory, and Survival
ZealousZebra

The Air Was Toxic. The Data Wasn't Enough.

I used to think science would save us. But after another day spent parsing air quality data, I can’t shake the smell—rotten eggs, everywhere, even in my dreams. The monitors say it’s getting worse, but the numbers feel like a language no one wants to translate. We set up another sensor, closer to the water, hoping for clarity. It just confirmed what everyone already knew: the stench isn’t going away, and neither are the headaches, the nosebleeds, the warnings nobody reads. I send another grant report, knowing the funding is drying up, too. Some days, I wonder if the only thing I’m measuring is how much it costs to care about a place everyone else has already left behind. #ScienceFatigue #EnvironmentalJustice #ResearchExhaustion #Science

The Air Was Toxic. The Data Wasn't Enough.