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https://nature-recovery-network.org/arts/

Arts

‘ Nothing can change humanity’s basic needs, but art can change our desires, which are the source of most of our impact on the Earth’s environment and biological diversity.’

— Minik Rosing, 2021

 

Wild Arts

Wild Arts builds on two art workshops that took place on the ancient wildflower hay meadow, Long Mead, in the summer of 2021.

The workshops were organised as part of the Nature Recovery Network (NRN) by artist, Alice Walker and Long Mead's Catriona Bass, to inspire participants to create art works for the Floodplain Meadows Partnership International Art Competition

The art workshops generated a strong response in the community; indeed it resulted in great local success in the international competition. Four out of the twelve winners (one for each month of the 2022 FMP Calendar) were participants of the workshops, including Julia Loken, a botanical artist, and Alice Walker, who was the overall joint-winner. (You can get a glimpse of our meadow artists at work in this compelling film made by the Nature-based Solutions Initiative of Oxford University that was screened at COP26. If you want to watch only the art session, click on the clip further down).

One important insight that came out of the summer art workshops was the value of combining scientific learning with artistic expression.

Both science and art require close and sustained attention to the subjects under scrutiny, both require understanding, both require interpretation and communication. 'Wild Arts' aims to take this symbiosis further with a series of workshops led by local artists in collaboration with local ecologists that draw inspiration, reference and material directly from the local habitat and combine opportunities to learn new skills, knowledge and respond creatively. This will be accompanied by a community-sourced creative nature diary project. NRN Wild Arts is funded by Natural England

Please contact us if you'd like to join this project. Our next workshop is Carbon Capture and Pigment

 

Wild Arts Home Page

 

Art in the Meadow

 
During the summer of 2021, Long Mead collaborated with Alice Walker to organise two Art and Science in the Meadow work shops for the Nature Recovery Network to inspire participants to create art works for the Floodplain Meadows Partnership International Art Competition. 
 
The Floodplain Meadows Partnership team is studying the natural history of these rare floodplain meadows, including their botanic diversity, their resilience, their significance for agriculture, and their role in carbon sequestration in the face of climate change. 
 
The art workshops generated a strong response and engagement within the community and recognition that both science and art require close and sustained attention to the subjects under scrutiny, both require understanding, both require interpretation and communication.

 Art in the the meadow

 This clip is part of Working with Nature: Rivers and Coast, which feature Long Mead. It was created by filmmaker, Matthew Mullholland, working in collaboration with the Nature-based Solutions Initiative at the University of Oxford. It was shown at COP26

 
 
From the Ground Up

This project was initiated by Oxfordshire Community Action Group Network in 2020. Alice Walker organised NRN's contribution which brought the community together with Andy Goodwin and Charlotte Holmes of Eynsham's Willow Coppice group providing the wonderful willow hoops as a foil for the community's creativity. NRN's art work had a very prominent place in the exhibition in the Old Fire Station, which then toured to Watlington and other venues in Oxfordshire. Click here to learn more about it.
 

From the Ground UP