Pro-Tests: Aesthetics and Activisms of Socially-Engaged Arts

This storyboard is intended to take you through a virtual tour of the Making With Place project, as it grew from a practice-research to public art project. 

There are clickable links throughout, including within many of the images, which will take you to diverse written, video and photographic content, in which community artists surfaced what matters in (new) aesthetics of the social role of art. 

Making With Place

Making with Place (MWP) began as a research project at the beginning of the COVID-19 global pandemic 2020. It was a collaboration between SKETCH Working Arts and York University Faculty of Environmental and Urban Change, and engaged young artists with lived experience of navigating society’s imposed margins. 

MWP engaged artist-reSearchers to explore artistic practice and production with PLACE, as knowledge, scholarship, resistance and as collective care.

About Making with Place Research Project

Place asks us to start with where we are, who we are, in relation to where we are, what has come before us, what’s emerging now and where do we want to go?

Making with Place, invites centering in the complexities, the dynamics and flows of all of these at once: physical space(s), historical and current contexts, internal landscape, relationships with humans and more-than-humans, time scapes and the transcendence of constructed boundaries into liberated (pulsating) futurity.

Guiding questions: What does it mean to make with place? What desires and intentions for community and culture emerge when making with place?

art is not simply a tool for uncovering but rather a process for exploring meanings, or as James Baldwin (1985) asserts, for “laying bare the questions that have been hidden by the answers”

Art subverting research, creating culture and influencing change

The project surfaced urgings of young artists: that we make art that pertains to our lives in the world, that we declare injustice with pubic art, and that we tell and retell stories of past and present that contest colonialism and all its boundaries.

but first…place

Bert Whitecrow’s personal poetic narrative

Jess DeVitt’s place as internal

I’ve been thinking what happens when place is something inside of us? for me it’s like intrusive thoughts coming in waves, spiralling thoughts…thinking about these thoughts as coming deep from inside of my brain, and settling there

Suzie Mensah’s an invitation, with Jess DeVitt

Olympia Trypis’ medicine mobiles offering

I made each dreamcatcher so that they could be taken off and people could take them into their tents. I have friends who live here, so I thought that the people that live here would appreciate them the most.

Jahmal Nugent’s animal crossings

snail-pic

Engaging with land and more-then-humans, botanical becoming

Pree Rehal’s CRIP collab zine

CRIP Collab a zine showcasing the work of disabled artists of colour, curated by Pree Rehal

being/love by Destiny Pitters

Many marginalized folk don’t have the privilege of clear vision when thinking of place as location; instead, we are afforded a broken window with shards of rejection, houselessness, slavery, genocide and asylum-seeking. But as creative substitutes, place exists for us in other ways: as loved ones (human and non-), identities and dreams.

Place as Verb expresses living processes of place-making. 

Place Holds Histories manifest and contested in diverse ways of being and inter-being.

Place Is Relational enacting a form of (Re)Mapping, revealing histories and dynamics of place.

Serving as (Re)Visions into the relational possibilities and politics of shared space.

Place is internal to each being, subjective, as well as external, geographic, and objective.

Place is political Turtle Island is a space of deep rifts caused by dispossession of Indigenous lands, and settler, colonial and capitalist violence to Indigenous and Black and Brown bodies. Making with place seeks aesthetics of disruption, recognition, transformative justice, & anti-capitalism.

(New) Aesthetics in Socially Engaged Arts 

Place is a dynamic and active collaborative element in socially engaged arts

Internal Landscape is a ‘place’ from within, in which knowledge is generated revealing that subjectivity and localized genealogies matter 

Art Production, through socially engaged arts, can be a practice of Collective Care 

Public socially engaged art with communities, leads to Relational Becoming – part of social transformation

when asked about theory and reflection artists responded:

didn’t we already theorize and reflect and share knowledge in the creation of our art work?

Interviews were synthesized into formal presentations and blog pieces to share broadly through an online journal-zine 

Artists joined curatorial teams to consider how to move these place learnings into community engaged public art projects.

(new) aesthetics

relationality and relational becoming in arts process and production particularly in public space

place, in all of its meanings, is a collaborator

grounding the work in transformative justice – committing to the reduction and address of historic harm

imagining futurity through the lens of collective and reciprocal care, regenerative reciprocity, and relationships with the more-than-human world

leadership that counters dominant and oppressive paradigms is the one to follow

art is knowledge and theory – it is thinking while doing

lived experience is critical to liberation

Credit and thanks go to:

Jess DeVitt

Pree Rehal

Ammarah Ahmed

Ayrah Taerb

Bert Whitecrow

Jahmal Nugent

Olympia Trypis

Nigel Edwards

Lisa Myers

Sarah Flicker