Ecology and Society (Jun 2017)

The imaginary worlds of sustainability: observations from an interactive art installation

  • Roy Bendor,
  • David Maggs,
  • Rachel Peake,
  • John Robinson,
  • Steve Williams

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5751/ES-09240-220217
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 2
p. 17

Abstract

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We report on preliminary results from a public engagement project based on a procedural approach to sustainability. The project centered on an interactive art installation that comprised a live actor, an immersive soundscape featuring a handful of different characters, an interactive touch-table, and four interactive rooms within which participants wandered, partially guided by a narrative through-line, yet at the same time left to make sense of any larger meanings on their own. The installation was designed to experiment with two propositions: (1) that there is value in public engagement with sustainability based on the exploration and articulation of deeply held beliefs about the world - the worldviews, values, and presuppositions that mediate perception and action; (2) that there is value in replacing the infocentric tendency of most public engagement on sustainability with an approach premised in aesthetics and experiential resonance. Following the installation's two-week pilot run, our preliminary results indicated that the majority of participants found the experience both resonant and thought provoking, and were mostly willing to critically engage with their pre-existing notions of sustainability.

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