Living Things, 2014 (original) (raw)

Über Nature - Licht Luft Scheisse Volume 3; Edited by Sandra Bartoli, Kathrin Grotz, Silvan Linden, Florian Wüst, Patricia Rahemipour

Über Nature - Licht Luft Scheisse Volume 3, 2020

Licht Luft Scheisse Volume 3 Über Nature Edited by Sandra Bartoli, Kathrin Grotz, Silvan Linden, Florian Wüst, Patricia Rahemipour In the age of the Anthropocene, the concept of »nature« stands increasingly in opposition to the realization that we influence, alter, and destroy our environment in all spheres of animate and inanimate matter. Über Nature looks back on the homonymous exhibition of mainly artistic works that address our relationship to nature, the biosphere, and the non-human in the context of the Botanical Museum Berlin–and in this way, directly or indirectly deals also with the institution as a project of modernity. With contributions by: Böhler & Orendt, Book & Hedén, Joerg Franzbecker, Helen Mayer Harrison & Newton Harrison, Heidrun Hubenthal & Michael Wilkens, Katja Kaiser, Susanne Kriemann, Katarzyna Kukula, Kito Nedo, Kim Nekarda, Patricia Piccinini, New Territories_S/he, Gitte Villesen Concept and editing: Sandra Bartoli, Silvan Linden, Florian Wüst Übersetzungen / Translations: Ulrich Gutmair (EN-DE), David H. Haney (DE-EN), Dorota Eckardt (PL-DE) Proofreading and copy editing: Johanna Roth (DE), Mark Soo (EN) 200 pages, 113 b/w illustrations Graphic design: State adocs Hamburg ISBN: 978-3-943253-33-7

The Atlas of Living Australia"s Spatial Portal

The Atlas of Living Australia is an AUS$65m Australian Government initiative to "To develop an authoritative, freely accessible, distributed and federated biodiversity data management system". The Atlas, led by CSIRO, partners with over 18 National, State and Territory agencies to deliver online, a wide range of biological and environmental information. The Atlas also supports nodes of, or links to the Global Biodiversity Information Facility, Catalogue of Life, Encyclopedia of Life, Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL), Map of Life, Barcode of Life Data Systems (BOLD), Ocean Biogeographic Information System, Morphbank, the Taxonomic Database Working Group and other projects. Two years into the three year project, the Atlas delivers over 114,000 species and 22 million occurrence records, 200+ environmental layers, a range of spatial and annotation tools and citizen science support. The Atlas Spatial Portal, the focus of this paper, is a tool designed to support environmenta...

The World of Downe: Darwin's living landscape laboratory

Darwin-Inspired learning, 2015

Charles Darwin’s achievements are all the more extraordinary when we reflect on the simple tools and domestic spaces in which he practised his post-Beagle enquiries. The relatively unchanged garden at Down House – with its glasshouse, kitchen-beds, lawn, hedgerows, adjacent woods and meadows – is a living monument to the observations, experiments, collections and continuous questioning clearly evidenced in his notes and letters. This chapter will examine Darwin’s ‘living laboratory’ in the context of gardens as scientific spaces – from the experimental garden of Gregor Mendel to contemporary studies of ecological patterns and communities in a Leicestershire suburban garden. Drawing on Darwin’s correspondence, notebooks and publications it will position Darwin within a social network of garden experimentation, and associated fieldwork, by both amateur and professional, male and female, correspondents. These historical explorations of Darwin’s ‘locale’ (Kohler, 2011, p. 581) will set the scene for contemporary discussions of Darwin-inspired learning.

The Live Creature and Ethereal Things

Introduction by Nick Houde for discussion with artist and theorist Susan Ploetz DAAD Ex-changing Perspectives: Art for Change conference 6 April 2018 Berlin, Germany