FREE | Friday, May 23rd | 6 pm - 7:30 pm
We will have a conversation with artist Tal Beery, scholar Joshua Moses, and this year’s Uncertainty Academy cohort.
Science and art have at times been viewed as opposing forces, and at other times, as necessary and even intertwined allies. Today, as the urgency of climate change intensifies, the question of how scientific data can effectively communicate and resonate with lived realities on a warming planet has become central. If science seeks to document and explain, art offers ways to reframe, interpret, and connect. Science and art, in different yet complementary ways, shape our understanding of and response to planetary crises. The discussion will also be livestreamed, and registration is required for those who wish to join remotely.
LIVESTREAM REGISTRATION
Tal Berry
Tal is an artist, independent curator, and co-executive director of the Hurleyville Performing Arts Centre in the Catskill Mountains, just two hours north of New York City. He is co-founder and administrator of Arts & Ecology Incorporated, a nonprofit exploring the connections between nature and culture through artist-centered projects, consulting services for organizations, and fiscal sponsorships for artists. His published articles, artistic research, and curatorial projects explore human relationships with their environments and arts institutional design. Previous projects include Eco Practicum, School of Apocalypse, and Occupy Museums. Tal’s independent and collaborative art works have been exhibited in the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Brooklyn Museum, KW Institute for Contemporary Art, Ujazdowski Castle Centre for Contemporary Art, El Museo Del Barrio, and others.
Joshua Moses
Joshua has worked on religious response to the attacks of September 11th and Hurricane Katrina, studying the formation of disaster expertise (“disaster religious and spiritual care”) in what he calls the current “New Age of Anxiety.” He has worked with Nunatsiavut Inuit communities in northern Labrador on inequality, dispossession, community wellbeing, migration and identity in the context of recent land claim settlements and large-scale resource extraction. He has also conducted research in the Northwest Territories on migration, housing and homelessness. Joshua's focus on action research, collaborative research methods, and community-engaged research has lead him to work with a number of Philadelphia-area community and environmental organizations, including a partnership with the US Forest Service Philadelphia Field Station to develop youth-driven environmental studies curricula. His work on anthropology of mental health has focused on the production of knowledge in the context of disaster, intersections of spirituality/religion and mental health, and community response to disaster, environmental ruptures, and inequality. He is committed to combining research and teaching. He piloted a field school with students from Haverford College, University of Massachusetts and Inupiaq Alaskan youth in Northwest Alaska. Through the Philadelphia Area Creative Collaboratives, a program funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, in collaboration with the North Philly Peace Park, Friends of Mt. Moriah Cemetary, East Park Revitalization Alliance, and Philadelphia artist Li Sumpter, he developed the Urban Ecology Arts Exchange. Joshua also focuses on the response of educational institutions to climate change, and the ways we are (or are not) preparing students for futures that society itself struggles to imagine.