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Forecast

What is shaping how you think about the planet’s future?

Forecast is Invisible Dust’s new online programme exploring answers to that question.

Bringing together artists, scientists, and change-makers from across the globe, Forecast makes space for reflection and encourages fresh ways of seeing the world.

Our planet and our health

In Forecast’s latest event series, we explored the connections between human health and nature through a series of lunchtime art-science discussions.

We were joined by artists Frances Disley and Marielle Neudecker, scientists Sir David King and Emma Lawrance, Eliabeth Wathuti, the young environmentalist whose rousing speech at last year’s climate change conference in Glasgow is well worth a watch.

Recordings of all of Forecast’s events are available here.

 

Featured Forecast conversation

“What will our view of nature bring to the future?” was the central question of this discussion chaired by Jessica Swedian, Founder of Synchronicity Earth. The speakers were Milka Chepkorir from the Sengwer indigenous community, artist-architect Usman Haque, psychiatrist Iain McGilchrist, and environmental philosopher Danielle Celermajer.

Explore the complete archive of Forecast recordings here.

 

50 reflections on the planet’s future

We asked the sae question to 50 people from around the world, asking for answers in no more than 50 words:

What is shaping how you think about the planet’s future?

Contributors include Hindou Oumarou Ibrahim, Carlo Rovelli, Lily Cole, Hyphen Labs, Kasia Molga, Usman Haque and Judy Ling Wong.

You can browse read their responses here.

 

 

Forecast Artworks & Performances

Ahilapalapa Rands – ‘E Kū mālo`elo`e’ (To Stand Firm) 

“Where I’m from, we walk backwards into the future. Everything known, everything that has happened so far is what we face. Behind us is the unknown. Where we are going.”

 

Woven Time: A Girdle of Fig Leaves  – Adam Chodzko

A video in the form of a dream premonition. Adam Chodzko speculates about what art might need to become next in order to make a path of hope into the future.

 

Forecasting: Interesting Worlds – New collaboartive artwork by Fei Jun

You can watch the artist Fei Jun and two of the co-creators of this work in conversation with arts-science producer Lucy Wood and on our watchback page.

 

Programme Partners

We are delighted to be working alongside some wonderful people and organisations from around the world as Forecast evolves. Our partners include:

  • 32° East | Ugandan Arts Trust, Uganda
  • British Council Germany
  • Central Academy of Fine Arts, China
  • Flourishing Diversity, UK
  • Jessica Sweidan, Synchronicity Earth, UK
  • Leverhulme Centre for Anthropocene Biodiversity, University of York, UK
  • Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies, USA
  • Sydney Environment Institute, Australia

 

Get in touch

We are open to new collaborations for Forecast in 2022. Get in touch with Ed at ed@invisibledust.com if you would like to arrange a chat.

 

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Forecast Watch Back Page

‘E Kū mālo`elo`e (To Stand Firm)’ – Ahilapalapa Rands

‘Woven Time: A Girdle of Fig Leaves’ – Adam Chodzko

Forecasting: Interesting Worlds – Fei Jun

Dark Interludes – Michelle St Anne and Julie Vulcan with the Living Room Theatre

Forecast Event Programme Details

What is shaping how you think about the planet’s future?

Juneau Projects – Shoreline, Skyline, Treetop Messenger

Feral Practice – Garden to Garden

Estabrak – Sea; the remains between

Evgenia Arbugaeva – Stories from the Russian Arctic

Nii Obodai – Of Natural Magic

Kathy Prendergast – Strata

Future Fossils

Gayle Chong Kwan – Wastescape

Rodrigo Lebrun – Green (Screen) Dreams

ECOde

Margaret Salmon and Ed Webb-Ingall – Shore: How We See The Sea

Ahilapalapa Rands and Fiona MacDonald: Feral Practice – Encounters

Under Her Eye 2018: Women and Climate Change

Margaret Salmon – Shore at Under Her Eye

Gayle Chong Kwan – At the Crossroads: Microclimate Sensory Banquet at Under Her Eye

Kasia Molga – Human Sensor LDN

Under Her Eye Fellowship Programme

Ahilapalapa Rands – The Sewerby Cookbook

Blueprint: Future of Our Seas

Laura Wilson – Milling About

Onshore at Scarborough Seafest

Sounding The Sea symposium

Offshore: artists explore the sea

China Miéville – Tehom

Gayle Chong Kwan – Microclimate

Kasia Molga – Human Sensor

Owl Project – Rock Music

Adam Chodzko – Deep Above

Phil Coy – Rutherford Appleton Laboratory Space Residency

Laura Harrington – The Liveliest of Elements, an Ordinary Extraordinary Material

RE·THINK: Environment

Biophilia Ball

Eve Mosher – HighWaterLine Bristol

Disappearing Nature: artists supporting life on earth

Ways of Seeing Climate Change Symposium

Ellie Harrison – Anti Capitalist Aerobics

Elizabeth Price – Sunlight

Adam Chodzko – Rising

Mariele Neudecker – For Now We See

Mariele Neudecker – Heterotopias and Other Domestic Landscapes

Dryden Goodwin – Breathe

Jeremy Deller – Bats in Space

Faisal Abdu’Allah – Double Pendulum

other/other/other – A Good Clean Run

Townley and Bradby – The Bowthorpe Experiment

Liz Ballard – Tracing Water

HeHe – Plane Jam

HeHe – Is there a horizon in the deep water

Kaffe Matthews – In Clean Air We Fly

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