inspired by the testimonials of artists involved in PLACE Performing Landscapes
1. Root the Workshop in Sensory and Embodied Practices
Why: Artists often think through making, moving, or sensing. Ecological engagement should start with the body and the immediate environment.
- Land as co-facilitator: Begin with a site-specific ritual
e.g., a silent walk, a collective mapping of the space using natural materials, or a “listening to the land” exercise where participants document sounds, textures, or smells.
- Movement-based exploration: Incorporate somatic exercises
- Material experiments: Provide natural or foraged materials (clay, leaves, water) for ephemeral art-making, works that decompose or return to the earth.
2. Frame Contradictions as Creative Fuel
Why: Artists are comfortable with ambiguity. Lean into the tensions between art and ecology (e.g., human vs. more-than-human, permanence vs. impermanence).
- Paradox as prompt: Use questions like:
- “How might your art practice serve the land, rather than the other way around?”
- “What would it mean to create work that is intentionally temporary or invisible?”
- “How can your project be both a protest and a love letter to this ecosystem?”
- Case studies: Share examples of artists who embrace contradiction, such as:
- Agi Haines (speculative design that questions human exceptionalism).
- Tarshito’s Seed Bombs (guerrilla gardening as art).
- The Harrisons’ eco-art projects (collaborating with scientists and ecosystems).
3. Blend Theory and Practice Seamlessly
Why: Artists often resist purely theoretical frameworks but thrive when ideas are embodied or materialized.
- Theory as material: Turn readings or discussions into tactile or performative acts. For example:
- After reading a text on decolonial ecology, ask participants to create a “manifesto” using only found objects and natural pigments.
- Host a “walking lecture” where ideas are explored while moving through a landscape.
- Artist-led demos: Invite practitioners who bridge art and ecology (e.g., a bio-artist, a forager-turned-sculptor) to lead hands-on sessions.
4. Design for Collaboration with More-Than-Human Worlds
Why: Ecological art often involves non-human agents (plants, animals, microbes, weather). Workshops should reflect this.
- Non-human participants: Assign roles to elements of the environment (e.g., “What would the river say about your project?” or “How might the soil respond to your proposal?”).
- Long-term relationships: Encourage projects that extend beyond the workshop, such as:
- Adopting a plot of land and documenting its changes over a year.
- Creating a seed exchange or mycelium network among participants.
- Ethical frameworks: Discuss consent and reciprocity with non-human collaborators (e.g., “How do we ask permission from a tree before using its branches?”).
5. Subvert Traditional Workshop Structures
Why it matters: Artists and ecologists often work outside institutional norms. The workshop itself can model alternative ways of being.
- Non-linear time: Replace rigid schedules with rhythms inspired by nature (e.g., “We’ll follow the sun’s arc” or “Our breaks will align with the tides”).
- Decentralized facilitation: Rotate leadership among participants or use collective decision-making tools (e.g., sociocracy, consensus-based circles).
- Unconventional spaces: Host sessions in greenhouses, forests, or abandoned buildings—places that challenge the sterility of typical workshops.
6. Make Space for “Useless” and Speculative Work
Why: Ecological art often resists utilitarianism. Allow for play, failure, and the impractical.
- Speculative exercises: Ask participants to design:
- A monument for an extinct species.
- A ritual for grieving environmental loss.
- A futuristic ecosystem where humans are not the dominant species.
- Celebrate the ephemeral: Document and then erase a collective artwork (e.g., a sand mandala washed away by the tide).
7. Address the Politics of Art and Ecology
Why: Artists engaging with ecology often grapple with funding, institutional critique, and activism.
- Funding as a creative constraint: Host a session on “How to hack grant applications” to support unconventional ecological art (e.g., framing a gardening project as a “living sculpture”).
- Institutional critique: Discuss how to work within and against systems that may not align with ecological values (e.g., museums, galleries, or capitalism).
- Activism and art: Explore how artistic practices can support or intersect with environmental movements (e.g., creating protest banners with foraged dyes, or staging performances at climate strikes).
8. Prioritize Care and Reciprocity
Why: Ecological work is emotionally taxing. Artists need spaces to process grief, joy, and exhaustion.
- Emotional ecology: Include check-ins that acknowledge the emotional labor of ecological work (e.g., “What’s one thing in nature that’s giving you hope right now?”).
- Reciprocal relationships: Encourage participants to give back to the land or community hosting the workshop (e.g., a group clean-up, a gift to local ecological initiatives).
- Rest as resistance: Schedule unstructured time for reflection, napping, or wandering—framing rest as an act of defiance against productivity culture.
9. Document and Disseminate in Ecological Ways
Why: The legacy of the workshop should align with its values.
- Low-impact documentation: Use natural inks, seed paper, or digital formats with minimal carbon footprints for notes or outputs.
- Living archives: Create a shared digital garden (e.g., a collaborative website or a physical seed library) where participants can contribute ongoing work.
- Oral histories: Record audio or video testimonials of participants reflecting on their experiences, to be shared with future groups.
10. End with a Commitment to Continuity
Why: Ecological art is not a one-off event. The workshop should plant seeds for long-term engagement.
- Collective pledges: Have participants publicly commit to one action they’ll take post-workshop (e.g., starting a community garden, collaborating with a local ecological group).
- Network building: Facilitate connections between artists, ecologists, and activists for future collaborations.
- Open invitations: Leave the door open for returning to the land or space in the future (e.g., “This forest is now our shared studio, come back anytime”).

