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Workshops & seminars

Collaboration with Environments: Decolonial Plastics Cookbook Launch


Date & time
Wednesday, September 14, 2022
1:45 p.m. – 2:15 p.m.

Registration is closed

Cost

This event is free

Where

J.W. McConnell Building
1400 De Maisonneuve Blvd. W.
4TH SPACE

Wheel chair accessible

Yes

Sustainability is a multispecies matter. Through an introduction to centering deep and reciprocal collaboration with environments and multispecies within research-creation, we will examine what it means to design-with and become-with through art, making, and creative encounters with ecosystems. Reciprocity is central to all the examples we will look at, a principle of deep engagement with the environment, through critically decentering from an anthropocentric perspective.

This discussion also introduces a bioplastics cookbook, a research project to design bio-composite materials in collaboration with invasive plant species in and around the unceded Indigenous territories of Tiohtià:ke/Montreal. The project centres slow design processes, and responds to deep engagements of attending to, observing, sensing, noticing and witnessing weeds and their relationships. Through these actions of ‘getting to know you’, we consider the origins of these invasive plants, the colonizing politics of their presence, their socio-cultural histories, behaviors, properties, relatives and entanglements. This design research examines the kinship of weeds, and the potential for reframing historically problematic plants into future materials. 

Discussion will be hosted by Dr. Miranda Smitheram, Assistant Professor of Material Futures, Dept of Design and Computation Arts, with research and design by Sita Singh, Juan Esteban Mejia Gomez, and Catherine Vien-Bachand.

How can you participate? Attend in person or online by registering for the Zoom Meeting or watching live on YouTube.

Have questions? Send them to info.4@concordia.ca  

Speaker

Dr. Miranda Smitheram

Dr Miranda Smitheram (Ngāi Tahu, Swedish, Irish, Scottish) is a design researcher, artist and educator from Aotearoa/New Zealand. Based in the department of Design and Computation Arts at Concordia, Miranda’s research focuses on decolonial design approaches through unravelling ontologies, kinship and material potentiality of invasive plant species. Miranda’s creative practice is tactile and embodied, and incorporates ancestral and contemporary methods to work with socio-cultural matter and nonhuman collaborators. Through research-creation she develops biocomposite textiles, structural forms and materials that engage with sustainable and relational futures.


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