e201 robin sokoloski - why arts matter

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conscient

23 күн бұрын

• I believe that we are all connected by these invisible threads, the shared sinew amongst all living things, that includes humans, plants, animals, what have you, and that what art is, is the lighting up, making those invisible threads visible. … It doesn't really explain in that analogy what art is, but it certainly speaks to the way it functions and why it should matter to society : why arts should matter.
In this episode, Robin Sokoloski (www.linkedin.com/in/robinsokoloski/?original_referer=https%3A%2F%2Fwww%2Egoogle%2Ecom%2F&originalSubdomain=ca) (she/her) discusses her recent experiences and current work in the arts research sector with a focus on how the arts community can have meaningful impact on climate change and on community-engaged arts, emphasizing the importance of relationships and collaboration in creating impactful art that resonates with communities.
Robin has been working in the arts and culture sector for over twenty years. I remember her coming to us while I was working at Canada Council with this crazy idea for Mass Culture and 20 years later it is wonderful organization where she is Director of Programming and Research of Mass Culture (massculture.ca/) , where Robin is working with academics, funders and arts practitioners to support a thriving arts community by mobilizing the creation, amplification and community informed analysis of research.
My last conversation with Robin Sokoloski was e61 from research to action (conscient-podcast.simplecast.com/episodes/e61-sokoloski-from-research-to-action) in 2021. This time we focused on the end of the world as we know it and the role of art came up, including how to use tools such as the Living Climate-Impact Framework for the Arts project (massculture.ca/research-in-residence/living-climate-impact-framework-for-the-arts/#:~:text=This%20qualitative%20arts%20framework%20provides,useful%20arts%20impact%20assessment%20framework) , (see e195 emma bugg - art, scholarship and environment (conscient-podcast.simplecast.com/episodes/e195-emma-bugg-art-scholarship-and-environment) for details) and how to better mobilise the arts sector around climate change.
Robin, who is a co-founder of SCALE and a leading voice in the Canadian arts service organisation climate action movement and I like her ideas:
• We're so good at bringing people together and having conversations, as an arts community, on a very surface level about very serious, complex issues. But we need the tools beyond just facilitation and different convening models. We actually need measuring sticks or whatever is at our disposal that we can feel confident in to be able to have those deeper level conversations. And that's what this framework does. I'm noticing as I'm bringing the art service organizations together around these conversations around climate, it's been very focused on climate mitigation. Fine, fair enough. I think that's a very important and valuable thing to be aware of. But now, whether we like it or not, we're at a point where we need to start thinking about climate adaptation. And this is a new frontier for me. I know it's also a very new space for the funders. And so what I think we need to be able to do, and what I feel very proud of what we're starting to achieve, is bringing both the funders together with different actors within the arts community to apply tools like Emma's framework to have these deep conversations about how we can move towards action. What does this look like for us now? What changes do we need to make?
Robin also believes in community-engaged arts and the in ‘walking her talk’ by integrating participatory processes in everything she does:
• Community engaged arts is really a set of principles that I have completely been able to live by throughout my career. So fortunately, specifically within mass culture, I align community engaged arts very closely to a methodology within academia called participatory action research. And what's so relevant and how I feel that community engaged arts can have a real significant impact on art and climate is because of these principles which always rate relationships above anything else.
After our conversation, I wrote to a friend that ‘Robin is one of the holders of key knowledge for the future of the arts in this country’ and I think she’s just getting started.
Robin recommends the following resources:
• Research in Residence: Arts’ Civic Impact (open.spotify.com/show/22WYvLXTiSPY2Hm2MUzfhf?si=9f10fe7e9a0647c0) by Shawn Newman
• Emergent Strategy (adriennemareebrown.net/book/emergent-strategy/) by Adrienne Maree Brown
• Designing Immersive Gatherings (www.atlasobscura.com/experiences/immersive-gatherings-course) workshop by Zach Morris
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Sections of the podcast (generated by AI and reviewed by Claude Schryer)
Welcome Back
In this introductory chapter, Claude welcomes Robin back to the podcast after thr...

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@IOSARBX
@IOSARBX 23 күн бұрын
conscient, cool content my guy