Entanglement: A Community Art Approach to Environmental Education
Date
2023-05
Author
Advisors
Vermeulen, Heather
Murray, Grant
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Abstract
Entanglement was first defined in 1997 by David W. Laist, marine mammal expert and
policy analyst, as the ways in which loops and openings of marine debris may entrap
an animal. Entanglement has documented effects on 354 distinct species and hundreds
of thousands of animals die each year. Still, plastic production continues to increase,
and most solutions are short-term and focus on disentangling the small fraction of
entangled animals we can see.
But entanglement is connected to more aspects of our existence than the material threat
to marine species. In the field of quantum mechanics, two particles are entangled
when the state of one is dependent on the other, regardless of how far apart they
are. Even if we are separated from our oceans geographically our lives depend on
them.
The more my Project progressed, reflecting on entanglement, the more elaborate the
meaning of the term became. This complexity is inherent – entanglement is “a means
of entangling; that by which a person or thing is entangled; an embarrassment, a snare;
a circumstance which complicates or confuses a matter.” My Project aimed to explore
these definitions, along with the ways in which our identities are entangled with
our daily lives and professions. The academic sciences are especially in need of the
practice, as researchers may attempt to remain objective, a characteristic of white
supremacy.
Alexis Pauline Gumbs is a fellow Black, Queer woman who knows about entanglement.
Her book Undrowned: Black Feminist Lessons from Marine Mammals (2021), changed my
perspective on my role as a marine scientist. I should not be learning about marine
species. Instead, I should be learning from them. Reading Undrowned’s meditations
on themes such as slowing down, collaborating, refusing, resting, and staying Black
gave me space to reflect on how I could use art as a form of Community-Based Environmental
Management (CBEM).
Within my graduate studies, there were few opportunities for creative engagement like
the critical work that Gumbs practices. To me, environmental management should make
connections between the social and natural sciences, arts, policy, humanities, and
non-western schools of thought instead of relying on one or two. To address this gap,
I formulated two main objectives for my MP: To intentionally create spaces for artistic
expression in my community, and 2) To collaboratively communicate the concept of entanglement
through artwork. I hypothesized that if I could create these spaces for collaborative
artmaking and share those works with others, then people may be inspired to continue
creating and reflecting on entanglement.
Part of my methodology for my MP involves my own creative practice of fluid painting,
a technique I learned alongside my mother Susan. The method involves thinning down
acrylic paints then layering all the colors into one cup. Then the paint is plopped,
drizzled, or poured onto a canvas, creating unpredictable pieces of art. Just as I
had to accept and appreciate the fluidity of my paintings, I had to do the same with
my Project as it evolved over the school year. I welcomed the serendipitous connections
that informed how I would accomplish my objectives, like my reintroduction to the
practice of zinemaking in my Critical Marine Studies class.
Zines, pronounced like “teens,” are interdisciplinary, non-professional, and non-commercial
publications that often uplift marginalized voices that are undervalued by mainstream
media. With roots in Black feminism and anti-establishment movements of the 1960s
and 1970s, zines were used by activists to spark collective action and call attention
to issues of environmental injustice. As I learned more about the history and culture
associated with zines, I saw the potential in creating a zine for my Project to foster
creativity, share perspectives, and reckon with entanglement.
But my project is more about the process, the “means of entangling,” than it is about
any final deliverable. Entanglement: A Community Art Approach to Education is two-part
project, as I developed and hosted Community Co-Creation Events and compiled the attendees’
artwork along with other independent submissions into Entanglement: A Co-Created Community
Zine. The Community Co-Creation Events brought people together to make art, challenge
our ways of thinking, strengthen interpersonal connections, and meditate on entanglement.
For example, in “Doodle & Discuss: Crafting Against Capitalism,” participants paired
doodle artmaking with a guided reading discussion of Gumbs’s “end capitalism” meditation
that explicitly discusses the threat of marine entanglement to the North Atlantic
right whale. While the “products” of the event, the doodles, are included in my zine,
the significance of having that space for reflection cannot be fully encapsulated
on a page.
The Entanglement zine contained submissions from over 30 contributors making more
than 20 distinct types of media. I plan to continue the recursive process of zinemaking,
creating and adding new pieces to the online blog where the zine will be hosted. Other
artists have committed to continue creating and reflecting, as well. For example,
my mother, Susan, who has made over 140 collages since my “Collaging & Connecting”
Community Co-Creation event in November to the publication of this Report in April.
Throughout my MP, I was able to consider our entanglements to oppressive systems,
our identities, our communities, and the nonhuman world by collaborating with others.
In conclusion, Entanglement: A Community Art Approach to Environmental Education demonstrates
ways in which artmaking can build community and encourage deep, recursive learning.
Type
Master's projectDepartment
Nicholas School of the EnvironmentPermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/27245Citation
Mantell, Sydney (2023). Entanglement: A Community Art Approach to Environmental Education. Master's project, Duke University. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/27245.Collections
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