Arctic art education in changing nature and culture

The interconnection between the ecological and the cultural is evident in the Arctic. Thus, we propose the term ecoculture to highlight the connection of communities to places. Ecological knowledge, Indigenous knowledge, tacit knowledge and local knowledge are some of the concepts that highlight div...

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Main Authors: Timo Jokela, Maria Huhmarniemi
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: University of Aberdeen, School of Education 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.abdn.ac.uk/education/documents/journals_documents/Volume_29_Issue_2_Sustainability/2_EITN_2022_02_01_Jokela.pdf
https://doi.org/10.26203/55f2-1c04
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author Timo Jokela
Maria Huhmarniemi
author_facet Timo Jokela
Maria Huhmarniemi
author_sort Timo Jokela
collection Unknown
description The interconnection between the ecological and the cultural is evident in the Arctic. Thus, we propose the term ecoculture to highlight the connection of communities to places. Ecological knowledge, Indigenous knowledge, tacit knowledge and local knowledge are some of the concepts that highlight diverse ways of knowing in rural communities living close to nature. We use the terms northern knowledge, Arctic art education and new genre Arctic art, to discuss how art in North and the Arctic can foster education for sustainability and revitalisation of ecoculture. The long-term art-based action research to develop Arctic art education at winter circumstances is presented in this article. The research has included a number of winter art projects in Northern Scandinavia and North-West Russia. Three winter art projects, carried out in remote villages together with communities and schools, are reflected and theorized in this article. Artists, teachers and participants of winter art projects have transformed northern knowledge to respond to needs of contemporary society. As a result of the action research, wintery ecoculture has been revitalized and knowing with nature has been fostered as response to decolonisation needs. Research shows that new genre Arctic art and Arctic art education can revitalise ecoculture and northern knowledge.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre Arctic
North-West Russia
genre_facet Arctic
North-West Russia
geographic Arctic
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https://www.abdn.ac.uk/education/documents/journals_documents/Volume_29_Issue_2_Sustainability/2_EITN_2022_02_01_Jokela.pdf
https://doi.org/10.26203/55f2-1c04
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op_source Education in the North, Vol 29, Iss 2, Pp 4-27 (2022)
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spelling fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:oai:doaj.org/article:8e3493e1338242a59e252363846e41a1 2025-01-16T20:02:35+00:00 Arctic art education in changing nature and culture Timo Jokela Maria Huhmarniemi 2022-11-01 https://www.abdn.ac.uk/education/documents/journals_documents/Volume_29_Issue_2_Sustainability/2_EITN_2022_02_01_Jokela.pdf https://doi.org/10.26203/55f2-1c04 en other eng University of Aberdeen, School of Education 0424-5512 2398-0184 https://www.abdn.ac.uk/education/documents/journals_documents/Volume_29_Issue_2_Sustainability/2_EITN_2022_02_01_Jokela.pdf https://doi.org/10.26203/55f2-1c04 undefined Education in the North, Vol 29, Iss 2, Pp 4-27 (2022) arctic art art education ecoculture sustainability art-based action research art anthro-se Journal Article https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_6501/ 2022 fttriple https://doi.org/10.26203/55f2-1c04 2023-01-22T17:51:46Z The interconnection between the ecological and the cultural is evident in the Arctic. Thus, we propose the term ecoculture to highlight the connection of communities to places. Ecological knowledge, Indigenous knowledge, tacit knowledge and local knowledge are some of the concepts that highlight diverse ways of knowing in rural communities living close to nature. We use the terms northern knowledge, Arctic art education and new genre Arctic art, to discuss how art in North and the Arctic can foster education for sustainability and revitalisation of ecoculture. The long-term art-based action research to develop Arctic art education at winter circumstances is presented in this article. The research has included a number of winter art projects in Northern Scandinavia and North-West Russia. Three winter art projects, carried out in remote villages together with communities and schools, are reflected and theorized in this article. Artists, teachers and participants of winter art projects have transformed northern knowledge to respond to needs of contemporary society. As a result of the action research, wintery ecoculture has been revitalized and knowing with nature has been fostered as response to decolonisation needs. Research shows that new genre Arctic art and Arctic art education can revitalise ecoculture and northern knowledge. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic North-West Russia Unknown Arctic
spellingShingle arctic art
art education
ecoculture
sustainability
art-based action research
art
anthro-se
Timo Jokela
Maria Huhmarniemi
Arctic art education in changing nature and culture
title Arctic art education in changing nature and culture
title_full Arctic art education in changing nature and culture
title_fullStr Arctic art education in changing nature and culture
title_full_unstemmed Arctic art education in changing nature and culture
title_short Arctic art education in changing nature and culture
title_sort arctic art education in changing nature and culture
topic arctic art
art education
ecoculture
sustainability
art-based action research
art
anthro-se
topic_facet arctic art
art education
ecoculture
sustainability
art-based action research
art
anthro-se
url https://www.abdn.ac.uk/education/documents/journals_documents/Volume_29_Issue_2_Sustainability/2_EITN_2022_02_01_Jokela.pdf
https://doi.org/10.26203/55f2-1c04