Showing posts with label Social Change. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Social Change. Show all posts

Wednesday, 5 November 2014

Arts and Climate Change

Marshall McLuhan said, "artists are harbingers of cultural change".  Cape Farewell is a project that brings scientists together with writers, visual artists, musicians, film makers and architects to explore the seas, in order to collectively address and raise awareness of climate change. The brain child of the organization, David Buckland is an artist who has invited other creatives such as writer Ian McEwan, musicians Kt Tunstall and Feist, and sculptor Anthony Gormley onto the ship into the Arctic.  Artists Heather Ackroyd and Dan Harvey for instance, carved a large lens out of ice and focused images onto large slabs of ice.


Scientists have had the evidence of global warming for years and this project works to provide a creative tool for communicating the need for us all to take heed and shift our practices.

Tuesday, 4 February 2014

Dementia and Care with Dignity

I few weeks ago I wrote about an environmental and arts in health  program that I had been involved in to enhance the environment of a medical ward housing demetia patients in the West of Ireland. With the recent deaths in Canada of Alzheimer patients who have wandered out of their care facility, I have been compelled to undertake further research and explorations into what is possible for the care of the elderly with severe Alzheimer disease.

What follows is a video done by CNN during which we are invited by Dr. Gupta to travel to Hogewey, a small village in Weesp, the Netherlands, to a nursing home that is really a village complete with shops, hair salons and community programmes. The architectural adaptations, nursing care, and arts activities such as music, cooking and other projects, allow patients to participate in their community and succeeds in providing a safe, healthy living environment.


We are taken to a wonderful village in which people are enabled to lead a life with dignity despite their severe dementia. It illustrates what can be done with creativity, architectural adaptations and proper training for all staff.

We in Canada need to learn a lesson!

Friday, 31 January 2014

An arts and Peacebuilding project in Bahrain

The combination of imagination and action is powerful and can be transformative. What follows is a project taken up by a group of young Bahrainian men and women to provide opportunities for renewed tolerance and understandings of each other. It is the story of ULAFA'A, the team of individuals and the process.

They initiated everything from Free Hugs, to collaborative notebooks.

The project was presented at Brandeis University in 2013.

Friday, 20 December 2013

Theatre and Peacebuilding: Arts and Politics






This trailer of a larger project directed by Allison Lund explores the use of theatre as a medium through which people work together to heal community and peace build. It reflects international projects by artists and theatre directors in Cambodia, Australia, Argentina and Uganda. These are new forms of theatre created by people within a community. It raises artistic and peacebuilding dilemmas such as can theatre be used for political purposes and, in doing so, is the aesthetic quality compromised as there is little time to digest the process?

This video, and the projects it portrays is inspiring.