{"id":19970,"date":"2023-07-18T14:19:01","date_gmt":"2023-07-18T14:19:01","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/juliesbicycle.com\/?p=19970"},"modified":"2023-07-19T13:36:01","modified_gmt":"2023-07-19T13:36:01","slug":"reflections-on-the-colour-green-lab-2023","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/juliesbicycle.com\/news-opinion\/reflections-on-the-colour-green-lab-2023\/","title":{"rendered":"Reflections on The Colour Green Lab 2023"},"content":{"rendered":"\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n
The Colour Green is Julie Bicycle’s introductory environmental knowledge and skills programme which supports and empowers cultural practitioners and artists of colour to participate in, and lead on, environmental action in the UK. <\/em><\/p>\n We hear from Rebecca Buckley<\/strong><\/a> – one of the participants from our recent The Colour Green Lab<\/strong><\/a> – about her experience taking part in the programme.<\/em><\/p>\n Taking part in the Colour Green Lab (CGL) 2023<\/strong> has been a huge help in my ongoing effort to actively minimise my impact on the environment.<\/p>\n I had been looking for ways to minimise my impact on the environment and I am also keen to enable others to make a positive impact on the environment through my art practice. I knew I lacked knowledge and had been looking for support to enable me to make a difference for some time.<\/p>\n I hoped this programme would help me develop my understanding of climate justice and climate change and was also very keen to become part of a cultural network with other artists of colour where we could support each other to make a difference.<\/p>\n We started with some informal introductions to get to know each other. After a brief introduction to the concepts of climate justice, later sessions covered: systems change, an introduction to climate science and policy, land nature and biodiversity, material systems, resilience and collective care, culture and climate action, and finally making change happen.<\/p>\n At times the wealth of information shared was overwhelming and there were occasions where I felt as if I wanted to run away and hide from the huge number of statistics and the emotional demands of what I was hearing. There was a sense of shared grief when faced with the stark realities of what we are doing to the planet and to many indigenous peoples. But throughout we were supported by Farah, our facilitator, particularly in the session on climate grief, where we were able to explore our own anxieties in a safe and supportive environment.<\/p>\n I had already been making changes to reduce my environmental impact as an artist by designing modular sculptures that could be easily taken apart, to enable less carbon heavy transport and easier recycling of materials. I also introduced mechanical fixing, reducing energy use and producing less material waste through less reliance on heat (welding and brazing).<\/p>\n To move forward, I needed to make further changes to two elements of my practice, materials and process. To do this I started a new sculptural project called \u2018Gone to Earth\u2019 and my proposal was accepted for exhibition at Winter Sculpture Park 2023. My sculpture would be exhibited alongside the work of 39 other artists in an orchard in Kent the following February.<\/p>\n To research and develop the materials, I joined the Create programme at Steamhouse, Birmingham City university\u2019s STEM research facility in October last year. With the support and mentoring of lead technician Sarah King (a materials expert with a specialism in textiles), I developed bioplastics using seaweed derivatives, vegetable dyes and vegetation. With Sarah\u2019s help, I found a way to incorporate the bioplastics into my work by developing a \u2018holding\u2019 system using hessian, woven jute and recycled sari silk.<\/p>\n By the time I joined the CGL in January, I was nearing the end of the development stage for GTE, but was still able to benefit from my learning during this process, and perhaps more importantly, develop a road map for future work. Using the knowledge I gained I am now developing a pre-design process including climate justice research, supported by the resources provided by Julie\u2019s Bicycle. Going forward I will be much better prepared to produce work that responds to environmental and social factors that would contribute to climate change.<\/p>\n\r\n \r\n <\/div> \r\n<\/div> \n\n\r\n\r\n
\nWhat I hoped to get out of the lab<\/h2>\n
The Programme<\/h2>\n
Colour Green Lab and \u2018Gone To Earth\u2019 \u2013 a Modular Sustainable Sculpture.<\/h2>\n