From 0c1d28f6ee12e1ad5629720a7fa7a5be5155e20a Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: decentral1se Date: Mon, 10 Jun 2024 13:00:30 +0200 Subject: [PATCH] fix: link --- content/2024/^-x-varia-en.md | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/content/2024/^-x-varia-en.md b/content/2024/^-x-varia-en.md index 702868cd..e6f919f1 100644 --- a/content/2024/^-x-varia-en.md +++ b/content/2024/^-x-varia-en.md @@ -17,7 +17,7 @@ The ^ collective will be visiting Varia at the end of June. This visit is a foll Baoth Mooney's practice moves between visual art, performance and music, and her recent PhD work has researched ecopsychosocial relationships of care through textile in human-human contexts. Finan's work is assembled from interactive digital media and includes organising events and collaborating with universities, museums, artists, fungi, lichen, birds, ants and trees. Kelly experiments with the rural landscape, developing works in a posthuman relationship with land and dreamscape. McMorrow has a mixed media practice, primarily painting and collage, and leads community-facing educational and collaborative projects. -In 2022, they began working on a project that considered grief and the ritual of the wake, called Waking the Land. This considered environmental grief from the perspective of Benbo Mountain, the closest mountain to Manorhamilton, where prospecting licences for heavy metal mining were handed out by the Irish state in 2022. They were inspired by philosopher Judith Butler and her writings about the need to establish ‘grievability’ in relation to people, places, living organisms and environments. They were taken with Butler advocating that: ...in order to value any of these things we must be willing to grieve their loss. And in order to grieve, we must value something enough before we lose it. You can read more about their work here: https://waking.land/ +In 2022, they began working on a project that considered grief and the ritual of the wake, called Waking the Land. This considered environmental grief from the perspective of Benbo Mountain, the closest mountain to Manorhamilton, where prospecting licences for heavy metal mining were handed out by the Irish state in 2022. They were inspired by philosopher Judith Butler and her writings about the need to establish ‘grievability’ in relation to people, places, living organisms and environments. They were taken with Butler advocating that: ...in order to value any of these things we must be willing to grieve their loss. And in order to grieve, we must value something enough before we lose it. You can read more about their work here: [waking.land](https://waking.land/) **Date:** Tuesday, 25th of June 2024
**Time:** 19:30-21:30 CEST