TY - JOUR
T1 - Framing artistic practices through new materialism to ensure multispecies futuring in the built environment
AU - Harre, Olivia Thomassen
AU - Holst Laursen, Lea
AU - Andersen, Hans Jørgen
AU - Neuhoff, Rike
AU - Simeone, Luca
PY - 2024/12/8
Y1 - 2024/12/8
N2 - This paper investigates the potential of applying new materialism as a frame for artistic practices to ensure multispecies perspectives in futuring initiatives. We present a case study examining artistic practices that unfolded adjacent to a construction site of an urban transformation project in Greater Copenhagen, where new residential homes are being built. As a counter-reaction to the continuous construction of new buildings without paying attention to the plurality inherent in places, our case explores how participatory, artistic, experiential, and creative formats can challenge our collective imaginations of the present and future. A growing number of researchers advocate for challenging the human-centered approaches employed in futuring and extending participation towards multispecies agency. New materialism is a theoretical and philosophical direction that foregrounds the need to consider the materiality of our world and how we, as humans, might account for our relations with nonhuman entities. By applying new materialism to artistic practices, we investigate if such practices can support multispecies futuring in the built environment. We conclude that artistic practices can 1) activate and direct attention towards the unusual in the built environment and 2) offer techniques for immersion and for shifting perspectives through anthropomorphism.
AB - This paper investigates the potential of applying new materialism as a frame for artistic practices to ensure multispecies perspectives in futuring initiatives. We present a case study examining artistic practices that unfolded adjacent to a construction site of an urban transformation project in Greater Copenhagen, where new residential homes are being built. As a counter-reaction to the continuous construction of new buildings without paying attention to the plurality inherent in places, our case explores how participatory, artistic, experiential, and creative formats can challenge our collective imaginations of the present and future. A growing number of researchers advocate for challenging the human-centered approaches employed in futuring and extending participation towards multispecies agency. New materialism is a theoretical and philosophical direction that foregrounds the need to consider the materiality of our world and how we, as humans, might account for our relations with nonhuman entities. By applying new materialism to artistic practices, we investigate if such practices can support multispecies futuring in the built environment. We conclude that artistic practices can 1) activate and direct attention towards the unusual in the built environment and 2) offer techniques for immersion and for shifting perspectives through anthropomorphism.
KW - Artistic practice
KW - Multispecies futuring
KW - New materialism
KW - Urban transformation
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85211712337&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.futures.2024.103532
DO - 10.1016/j.futures.2024.103532
M3 - Journal article
SN - 0016-3287
VL - 166
JO - Futures The journal of policy, planning and futures studies
JF - Futures The journal of policy, planning and futures studies
M1 - 103532
ER -