Feral Hues & Invasive Pigments: Examining nature-based solutions through ecosocial art engaging spontaneous urban vegetation and informal greenspace

The project Feral Hues and Invasive Pigments (FH&IP) addresses the role of spontaneous urban plants (aka weeds) through ecosocial art, with the goal of reducing human alienation from plant life and land in urban and disturbed habitats. Hands-on work with spontaneous urban plants through ecosocia...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ellie Irons
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2024-12-01
Series:Nature-Based Solutions
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2772411524000284
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1846119367943651328
author Ellie Irons
author_facet Ellie Irons
author_sort Ellie Irons
collection DOAJ
description The project Feral Hues and Invasive Pigments (FH&IP) addresses the role of spontaneous urban plants (aka weeds) through ecosocial art, with the goal of reducing human alienation from plant life and land in urban and disturbed habitats. Hands-on work with spontaneous urban plants through ecosocial artistic methods—like walks, workshops, and land-based sculptures—provides cues for understanding weedy plants and informal greenspace (IGS) as part of nature-based solutions (NBS) in cities. In dialog with NBS research that takes a justice-oriented, degrowth approach to urban greenspace, the FH&IP project invites hands-on, hyperlocal participation of humans and plants at the neighborhood level to enhance the role of low maintenance IGS. Bringing ecosocial artistic methods into conversation with NBS research is one way to open up knowledge practices that inform both fields. Multisensorial, direct engagement with urban-dwelling plants can help practitioners and participants understand what kinds of maintenance and tending might help improve sentiment around spontaneous urban vegetation and improve its functional benefits for human communities. In the right context, such benefits range from flood mitigation to improved mental health to cooler, cleaner air. A “ladder of engagement” for reciprocal exchange with spontaneous urban plants is proposed to trace how the ecosocial artistic methods employed in FH&IP build plant-human solidarity towards more functional NBS in IGS. Methods like gallery installations, workshops, and walks are described and analyzed for their strengths and weaknesses in accessibility and depth, qualities that help initiate engagement and move participants up the ladder. At the lowest rung of the ladder, participants ignore or actively harm spontaneous urban plants, then move to noticing, tending, and eventually advocating for plants and the land they dwell on. The shift from alienation to advocacy has potential to improve the function of IGS by amplifying and enhancing contextually appropriate NBS that respect local needs and desires while improving equitable distribution of bioculturally diverse greenspace.
format Article
id doaj-art-f54f429e724b4bdea6895c3837a5a99e
institution Kabale University
issn 2772-4115
language English
publishDate 2024-12-01
publisher Elsevier
record_format Article
series Nature-Based Solutions
spelling doaj-art-f54f429e724b4bdea6895c3837a5a99e2024-12-17T05:01:53ZengElsevierNature-Based Solutions2772-41152024-12-016100137Feral Hues & Invasive Pigments: Examining nature-based solutions through ecosocial art engaging spontaneous urban vegetation and informal greenspaceEllie Irons0Independent Artist, Community Science Educator and Lab Manager, NATURE Lab, The Sanctuary for Independent Media, United StatesThe project Feral Hues and Invasive Pigments (FH&IP) addresses the role of spontaneous urban plants (aka weeds) through ecosocial art, with the goal of reducing human alienation from plant life and land in urban and disturbed habitats. Hands-on work with spontaneous urban plants through ecosocial artistic methods—like walks, workshops, and land-based sculptures—provides cues for understanding weedy plants and informal greenspace (IGS) as part of nature-based solutions (NBS) in cities. In dialog with NBS research that takes a justice-oriented, degrowth approach to urban greenspace, the FH&IP project invites hands-on, hyperlocal participation of humans and plants at the neighborhood level to enhance the role of low maintenance IGS. Bringing ecosocial artistic methods into conversation with NBS research is one way to open up knowledge practices that inform both fields. Multisensorial, direct engagement with urban-dwelling plants can help practitioners and participants understand what kinds of maintenance and tending might help improve sentiment around spontaneous urban vegetation and improve its functional benefits for human communities. In the right context, such benefits range from flood mitigation to improved mental health to cooler, cleaner air. A “ladder of engagement” for reciprocal exchange with spontaneous urban plants is proposed to trace how the ecosocial artistic methods employed in FH&IP build plant-human solidarity towards more functional NBS in IGS. Methods like gallery installations, workshops, and walks are described and analyzed for their strengths and weaknesses in accessibility and depth, qualities that help initiate engagement and move participants up the ladder. At the lowest rung of the ladder, participants ignore or actively harm spontaneous urban plants, then move to noticing, tending, and eventually advocating for plants and the land they dwell on. The shift from alienation to advocacy has potential to improve the function of IGS by amplifying and enhancing contextually appropriate NBS that respect local needs and desires while improving equitable distribution of bioculturally diverse greenspace.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2772411524000284Informal greenspaceUrban ecologyClimate changeSpontaneous urban plantsEcosocial art
spellingShingle Ellie Irons
Feral Hues & Invasive Pigments: Examining nature-based solutions through ecosocial art engaging spontaneous urban vegetation and informal greenspace
Nature-Based Solutions
Informal greenspace
Urban ecology
Climate change
Spontaneous urban plants
Ecosocial art
title Feral Hues & Invasive Pigments: Examining nature-based solutions through ecosocial art engaging spontaneous urban vegetation and informal greenspace
title_full Feral Hues & Invasive Pigments: Examining nature-based solutions through ecosocial art engaging spontaneous urban vegetation and informal greenspace
title_fullStr Feral Hues & Invasive Pigments: Examining nature-based solutions through ecosocial art engaging spontaneous urban vegetation and informal greenspace
title_full_unstemmed Feral Hues & Invasive Pigments: Examining nature-based solutions through ecosocial art engaging spontaneous urban vegetation and informal greenspace
title_short Feral Hues & Invasive Pigments: Examining nature-based solutions through ecosocial art engaging spontaneous urban vegetation and informal greenspace
title_sort feral hues amp invasive pigments examining nature based solutions through ecosocial art engaging spontaneous urban vegetation and informal greenspace
topic Informal greenspace
Urban ecology
Climate change
Spontaneous urban plants
Ecosocial art
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2772411524000284
work_keys_str_mv AT ellieirons feralhuesampinvasivepigmentsexaminingnaturebasedsolutionsthroughecosocialartengagingspontaneousurbanvegetationandinformalgreenspace