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Nov 21, 202052.518° 13.364°

Knowing Together

During The Shape of a Practice, four case studies gave insight into unique ways of building communities that share knowledge about climate issues both locally and at the planetary-scale. In Part 1 of this archived recording, artists Gilly Karjevsky and Rosario Talevi present their recent project in Berlin, and Warsaw collective Spółdzielnia „Krzak“ chronicle their collective practice of building community. In Part 2, scholar Denise Frazier and writer Rebecca Snedeker create a space around themes that include food systems, racial violence, climate and technology. Finally, artists Jason Ludwig and Tim Schütz explore comparative perspectives on the Anthropocene.

Knowing Together: Part 1
October 28, 2020. Recorded at HKW.
Knowing Together: Part 2
October 28, 2020. Recorded at HKW.

Climate Care
With Gilly Karjevsky & Rosario Talevi
Braid and Flow
Denise Frazier & Rebecca Snedeker
Krzak Inventory
With Spółdzielnia „Krzak“
The Quotidian Anthropocene
Jason Ludwig & Tim Schütz

The reason people come to learn about climate issues is often a product of how communities share and work through knowledge together. As part of The Shape of a Practice, these four case studies presented by different practitioners from around the world gave insight into unique ways of building communities that share knowledge about climate issues, both locally and at the planetary-scale.

Gilly Karjevsky and Rosario Talevi document their recent project Climate Care in Berlin, which builds archives and holds workshops where relational and situational morality shifts attention to processes of care, repair, maintenance and recuperation. Beginning from its creation in a small garden house in Warsaw, Spółdzielnia „Krzak“, chronicled their collective practice of building community around public events, gardening, and various publishing practices. Braid and Flow creates a space where people from different disciplines and practices came together around themes such as food and food systems, racial violence, climate, money, cultural institutions, technology and intimacy as they touch down in their local context of New Orleans. Moving between different locations, The Quotidian Anthropocene project creates situated, place-based and comparative perspectives on the Anthropocene with an archive on the STS Disaster platform that builds on work done during the Mississippi. An Anthropocene River project last year.