record

Thesis Info

LABS ID
00401
Thesis Title
Towards a sciart prospectus for climate change
Author
Andrew Ormston
2nd Author
3rd Author
Degree
MSc Environment, Culture and Society
Year
2011
Number of Pages
92
University
University of Edinburgh
Thesis Supervisor
Emily Brady
Supervisor e-mail
emily.brady AT ed.ac.uk
Other Supervisor(s)
Language(s) of Thesis
English
Department / Discipline
Geoscience
Languages Familiar to Author
English
URL where full thesis can be found
Keywords
sciart; scientist and artist collaboration; interdisciplinarity; polar art; visualization; communication of science
Abstract: 200-500 words
Cross disciplinary collaboration and exchange between scientists and artists have grown rapidly over the last twenty years and are providing material and evidence employed in the understanding of, and responses to climate change. The sciart field is wide ranging but operates at the margins, vulnerable to the floating focus of project based endeavour. This dissertation explores what a prospectus for sciart may look like from the perspective of those engaged in scientific practice relating to climate change. The investigation is introduced through a polar lens that provides a historical and conceptual frame for survey and interview work with Antarctic earth scientists and leading sciart proponents. Key themes arising from the research are identified before a consideration of an evaluative framework for sciart practice. The development of sciart is related to a wider process of inter and transdisciplinarity which informs a number of suggested pointers for a deeper embedding of sciart in the scientific response to climate change.