Planting Portals during the Apocalypse : Modelling Collaborative Futures through Folklore and Ground Responsiveness in a Climate-Endangered North
This thesis explores a multi-being interdependent future as a model for a sustainable coexistence post-climate apocalypse. Research into folklore as a way in which humans interact with their environment, with a focus on Icelandic and Norse apocalypse-related stories, is combined with research into c...
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Format: | Master Thesis |
Language: | English |
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2024
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Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/1946/48196 |
_version_ | 1821649546432741376 |
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author | Galadriel González Romero 1992- |
author2 | Listaháskóli Íslands |
author_facet | Galadriel González Romero 1992- |
author_sort | Galadriel González Romero 1992- |
collection | Skemman (Iceland) |
description | This thesis explores a multi-being interdependent future as a model for a sustainable coexistence post-climate apocalypse. Research into folklore as a way in which humans interact with their environment, with a focus on Icelandic and Norse apocalypse-related stories, is combined with research into climate change and arctic amplification. The findings juxtapose the prophecy-poem Völuspá and our current climate catastrophe. Science and folklore are ways in which humans try to understand the world, the combination of which results in the proposed genre science-folklore as a field that re-entangles art and science. Within artistic research, I develop techniques such as using intuition and forces of nature as signs to be able to collaborate with non-human beings. A real-life application of these approaches is ground responsiveness, a site-specific art-making method that exemplifies the interconnected existence. The physical manifestation of this thesis is the exhibition series A Portal to the End of the World where, in collaboration with soil, humans from different fields of knowledge, hidden people, and a seed, we create a portal at the Akureyri Botanical Garden to announce the apocalypse and serve as an interbeing gathering point to bring attention to our global climate apocalypse. |
format | Master Thesis |
genre | Akureyri Akureyri Akureyri Arctic Climate change |
genre_facet | Akureyri Akureyri Akureyri Arctic Climate change |
geographic | Arctic Akureyri |
geographic_facet | Arctic Akureyri |
id | ftskemman:oai:skemman.is:1946/48196 |
institution | Open Polar |
language | English |
op_collection_id | ftskemman |
op_relation | http://hdl.handle.net/1946/48196 |
publishDate | 2024 |
record_format | openpolar |
spelling | ftskemman:oai:skemman.is:1946/48196 2025-01-16T18:40:23+00:00 Planting Portals during the Apocalypse : Modelling Collaborative Futures through Folklore and Ground Responsiveness in a Climate-Endangered North Galadriel González Romero 1992- Listaháskóli Íslands 2024-06 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1946/48196 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/1946/48196 MA Myndlist Myndlistarmenn Myndlist Listsköpun Listamenn Meistaraprófsritgerðir Thesis Master's 2024 ftskemman 2024-06-25T14:28:20Z This thesis explores a multi-being interdependent future as a model for a sustainable coexistence post-climate apocalypse. Research into folklore as a way in which humans interact with their environment, with a focus on Icelandic and Norse apocalypse-related stories, is combined with research into climate change and arctic amplification. The findings juxtapose the prophecy-poem Völuspá and our current climate catastrophe. Science and folklore are ways in which humans try to understand the world, the combination of which results in the proposed genre science-folklore as a field that re-entangles art and science. Within artistic research, I develop techniques such as using intuition and forces of nature as signs to be able to collaborate with non-human beings. A real-life application of these approaches is ground responsiveness, a site-specific art-making method that exemplifies the interconnected existence. The physical manifestation of this thesis is the exhibition series A Portal to the End of the World where, in collaboration with soil, humans from different fields of knowledge, hidden people, and a seed, we create a portal at the Akureyri Botanical Garden to announce the apocalypse and serve as an interbeing gathering point to bring attention to our global climate apocalypse. Master Thesis Akureyri Akureyri Akureyri Arctic Climate change Skemman (Iceland) Arctic Akureyri |
spellingShingle | MA Myndlist Myndlistarmenn Myndlist Listsköpun Listamenn Meistaraprófsritgerðir Galadriel González Romero 1992- Planting Portals during the Apocalypse : Modelling Collaborative Futures through Folklore and Ground Responsiveness in a Climate-Endangered North |
title | Planting Portals during the Apocalypse : Modelling Collaborative Futures through Folklore and Ground Responsiveness in a Climate-Endangered North |
title_full | Planting Portals during the Apocalypse : Modelling Collaborative Futures through Folklore and Ground Responsiveness in a Climate-Endangered North |
title_fullStr | Planting Portals during the Apocalypse : Modelling Collaborative Futures through Folklore and Ground Responsiveness in a Climate-Endangered North |
title_full_unstemmed | Planting Portals during the Apocalypse : Modelling Collaborative Futures through Folklore and Ground Responsiveness in a Climate-Endangered North |
title_short | Planting Portals during the Apocalypse : Modelling Collaborative Futures through Folklore and Ground Responsiveness in a Climate-Endangered North |
title_sort | planting portals during the apocalypse : modelling collaborative futures through folklore and ground responsiveness in a climate-endangered north |
topic | MA Myndlist Myndlistarmenn Myndlist Listsköpun Listamenn Meistaraprófsritgerðir |
topic_facet | MA Myndlist Myndlistarmenn Myndlist Listsköpun Listamenn Meistaraprófsritgerðir |
url | http://hdl.handle.net/1946/48196 |