Everyday Futures: Australia in the Age of Humans

from Multimedia Library Collection:
Web Resources

 

Everyday Futures. Homepage.

Everyday Futures: Australia in the Age of Humans (website). https://everydayfutures.com.au.

In this project, we are exploring the role museums can play in helping to make sense of Australia’s experiences during a time of rapid planetary change and global disruption.Through an online exhibition, a physical exhibition at the National Museum of Australia, as well as forums, symposiums, art installations and other public events, we aim to create welcoming spaces for discussion, sharing ideas, and expressing emotions about the nature of the Anthropocene in Australia.

The aim of the project is to contribute to positive and hopeful cultural transformation by offering a place to ask—and answer—the questions:

  • What is Australia in the age of humans like?
  • How can we describe the Anthropocene in Australia?
  • How do we feel about it and why?
  • What significances do we see in the ways Australia is changing, and what emotions are we feeling about them?
  • What are we doing about it? In particular, what are we doing collectively to respond to the challenges of the Anthropocene with new ways of living in the world?

Global phenomena such as climate change, ocean acidification, soil erosion, deforestation, species loss, and chemical pollution can be too vast to comprehend. Often we speak about these changes and disruptive forces as problems in abstract or technical terms. We use ‘things’–objects, performances, stories, images, art–to help bring such diffuse phenomena into vivid focus. We explore and dramatize the local dimensions of the planetary-scale idea of the Anthropocene. We do this by:

  • Assembling objects in relationship with other living and inanimate beings, forces, systems and structures, as a means to dramatise and investigate the nature of the Australian Anthropocene;
  • Building a culture of story-telling through objects, images, places and other material forms, with a view to developing cultural capacity to ‘make sense’ of Anthropocenic changes;
  • Generating and supporting an engaged community of interest, who will contribute, comment and participate in the creation and development of the project. (Text from Everyday Futures)

Everyday Futures: Australia in the Age of Humans is funded by the ARC Discovery Grant “Understanding Australia in the Age of Humans: Localizing the Anthropocene,” which brings together researchers, curators, and artists from the University of Sydney, the University of New South Wales, the Australian National University and the National Museum of Australia. Users can contribute stories about living in the Anthropocene in Australia or outside, through images of objects from the places they love and show the changes happening there. One can explore by image, location, and contributor, and browse the list of publications and events.