Extractivism describes an economy that has an enormous impact on environmental and social systems and rarely delivers the benefits it promises.
The Summer School “Remote Guide to Extractivism” places students in multiple sites of extractivism across the world over the course of 2 weeks to investigate and map processes occurring simultaneously in the past, present, and future.
Two companion studios operating in Melbourne and Athens investigate similar extractive sites in their local context. Students in Melbourne, Australia travel to the wide, arid landscapes of the remote Wimmera region and work with local communities in place. Students joining the European studio explore Elefsina, the site of the ancient Eleusinian Mysteries and now an industrial town north of Athens, Greece. Participants test various methods and develop tools for dealing with complexity of what defines extractivism beyond its material effects. They also register its invisible manifestations and broader ramifications on the land and the cultures it disrupts. Collaborative mapping of supply chains (local ⁄ national ⁄ planetary), geologies (temporality ⁄ deep time ⁄ entropy), futures (projection ⁄ speculations ⁄ prediction), and effects (cultural and ecological implications, scales) of extractive processes in each one of these specific sites will be translated into artistic practice.
Hybrid: Students will be working locally at one of the two locations (Athens and Melbourne) and exchange online.
The program offers places to 25 Students in Melbourne, 15 Students in Athens from a wide range of arts and design disciplines, including performing arts, film, music, fine arts, media arts, design, and art education.
Heather BARNETT
Pathway Leader, MA Art and Science (UAL) | Lead: Summer School Athens
Desiree HERNANDEZ IBINARRIAGA
Lecturer, Department of Design (Monash)
Dr Eduardo KAIRUZ
Lecturer, Art Design & Architecture, Department for Architecture (Monash)
Nuria KRAEMER
Programme Manager, Shared Campus | Deputy Head, Transcultural Collaboration (ZHdK) | Lead: Summer School Athens
Dr Daisy TAM
Associate Professor at the Department of Humanities & Creative Writing (HKBU)