DesignTO Talks: They Feed Off Buildings

Luisa Rubisch and Rasa Weber of the Berlin-based design and architecture collective They Feed Off Buildings (TFOB) speak about the process of creating ‘Urban Terrazzo’, a composite material that uses architectural debris to pay homage to demolished buildings and their histories.

Following the talk, Maryam Siddiqi, Lifestyle Editor of The Globe and Mail, will interview Rubisch and Weber.

The project ‘Urban Terrazzo‘, which travels through various cities in order to explore the given materials of architectural demolition, illustrates one of TFOB’s experiments in performative design. Whenever an old building has to be demolished or its core removed, an enormous amount of demolition waste is produced. What seems like a pile of rubble, which usually ends up in local landfills, can actually be the beginning of a great new material story…

They Feed off Buildings (TFOB) is a design and architecture collective from Berlin, which specializes in material research and design. The studio unites a team with expertise in design, material research, architecture, film, and photography. Their performative design interventions explore a new perspective on architecture and its materiality. www.theyfeedoffbuildings.com

Luisa Rubisch and Rasa Weber are guests of the Goethe-Institut.

Writer and editor Maryam Siddiqi creates innovative journalism with a lasting impact. As the Lifestyle Editor at The Globe and Mail, she helms Globe Pursuits spanning the best in style, design, travel, food and drink, and health. As a writer, she specializes in lifestyle editorial, primarily travel and design, and her work has appeared in the National Post, Chatelaine, Report on Business, En Route, and Elle Canada.

‘DesignTO Talks: They Feed Off Buildings’ is organized by DesignTO, and co-presented with the Goethe-Institut & the Consulate General of Germany in Toronto and Harbourfront Centre. It is generously supported by Bulthaup Toronto.

Participants
Maryam Siddiqi, They Feed Off Buildings (Luisa Rubisch, Rasa Weber)

Bio-Materials workshop: Mycelium

During this workshop, Tosca Terán introduces participants to the amazing potential of mycelium for collaboration at the intersection of art and science. Participants learn how to transform their kitchens and closets into safe, mini-Mycelium Biolabs, learn how to cultivate mycelium, and leave the workshop with a live Mycelium planter/bowl form, as well as a wide array of possibilities of how they might work with this sustainable bio-material. All materials are provided.

Workshop includes:
1 round planter growth form
1 bag of substrate inoculated with Mycelium
Sculpting mix
Nitrile gloves
Particulate mask
Instructions

This workshop includes everything you need to grow a round planter, as well as hand-sculpt a small form plus, a full bag of substrate inoculated with mycelium! Suggestions on how to grow other forms or grow onto various armatures (3D printed, hand-knit/crocheted, wood structures, etc) will be discussed.

Mycelium can be used in industrial design, art, architecture – the possibilities are seemingly endless!

Mycelium= the mass of interwoven filamentous hyphae that forms especially the vegetative portion of the thallus of a fungus and is often submerged in another body (as of soil or organic matter or the tissues of a host) aka mushroom roots

Artist-instructor Tosca Teran works with Mycelium collaboratively –
creating the Midnight Mushroom Music Podcast.

Strange Weather: The Science and Art of Climate Change

Climate change is often framed as an exclusively scientific issue: a matter of rising carbon dioxide levels, decreasing arctic ice and species extinction. But humanists and artists also grapple with this environmental crisis, and today deeply engaged, thought-provoking and artistically savvy responses to climate change are showing up in galleries, concert halls and theaters as well as in universities across the globe. Indeed, much recent art deftly incorporates scientific research and methodologies, such as Philippe Squarzoni’s graphic novel Climate Changed, Mel Chin’s fine art app ‘Unmoored,’ and Daniel Crawford’s string quartet piece “Planetary Bands, Warming World”. Too often climate science and environmental humanities travel two parallel tracks, functioning as concurrent but not collaborative projects. Conjoining the two is a force amplifier.

This one day symposium will bring together climate scientists, humanists and artists to bridge this disciplinary gap. In partnership with co-sponsors the Jackman Humanities Institute (JHI) and the Centre for the Study of the United States (CSUS), the event will welcome guest scholars and artists who are committed to – and practiced in – the current paradigm shift to less siloed climate change thinking.

9:00am WELCOME

  • Steve Easterbrook, Director, School of the Environment, U of T
  • Alexandra Rahr, Bissell-Heyd Lecturer in American Studies, U of T

9:10am OPENING KEYNOTES

  • Katharine Hayhoe, Director, Climate Centre, Texas Tech. Katharine is an atmospheric scientist working to develop better ways of translating climate projections and bridge the gap between scientists and stakeholders.
  • Diane Burko: Fine Artist and Activist. Diane’s visual art incorporates scientific data, for example incorporating coral reef bleaching metrics in aestheticized images of underwater beauty.

10:30am COFFEE BREAK

11:00am PANEL DISCUSSION: How do we bridge the gap?

  • Bhavani Raman, Jackman Humanities Institute Fellow and Historian at the University of Toronto, who studies the history of colonialism and environmental law, with a particular focus on South Asia, such as in her exploration of the geographies of coastal flooding in Chennai.
  • Madhur Anand, Poet and Professor of Ecology and Environmental Sciences at the University of Guelph, where she mixes poetic and scientific approaches to articulating current and impending crises.
  • Paul Kushner, Atmospheric Physicist at the University of Toronto, who studies the links between ice, snow, and changing atmospheric circulation, while advocating for scientists to speak up about the risks and realities of climate change.

12:15pm LUNCH (included in registration fee)

1:00pm Data Comics Presentation

  • Fanny Chevalier, Assistant Professor in Information Visualization at the University of Toronto. Fanny studies interactive tools to support creativity and exploration.
  • Benjamin Bach: Lecturer in Design Informatics and Visualization, University of Edinburgh. Benjamin combines interactive information visualizations and storytelling to help people explore and understand data.

1:30pm Canadian Climate Challenge / Fun House Presentation

  • Andre Forsythe, Founder and Executive Director of the Canadian Climate Challenge. Andre works with scientists and artists to develop immersive experiences of climate change and sustainability solutions.

2:00pm REFRESHMENTS BREAK

2:30pm CLOSING KEYNOTES

  • Gavin Schmidt, Director of the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies. Gavin pairs his work on climate change drivers with scientific context for pop culture discussions of environmental crises.
  • Cate Sandilands, Professor and Trudeau Research Fellow, Faculty of Environment, York University. Cate studies the role of narrative in how to effectively communicate environmental crises to a wide audience.

3:50pm CLOSING REMARKS

4:00pm END

The Science and Art of Climate Change’ will extend the reach of ‘Strange Weather’ beyond 2019-2020. This symposium will be a key step in the School of the Environment’s exploration – evident in April 2019’s cross-disciplinary colloquium ‘Imagining a Post-Carbon World’ – of better integrating humanists into the School. To this end, the event will explore both theories of cross-disciplinary work and methodological questions of how exactly to enact such a timely and productive practice.

If you require accommodation please contact us at environment@utoronto.ca by November 18, 2019.

The Fire Within: The Stories the Earth Speaks Through Us

THIS EVENT HAS TWO SHOW TIMES TODAY

We are at a time when we are being called to put focus on our relationship to the Earth, the fires burn loud to draw and keep our attention.   Overwhelmed, seeming like nothing can be done, we unite to touch into the complexities of our relationship to the Earth, to ourselves as an expression of the land, to our desire to exist in harmony.  The journey of climate crisis and justice is full of all that life offers and with it comes many stories and the spectrum of emotion. 

 

The Fire Within: Stories the Earth Speaks Through Us will be an improvised InterPlay performance where we explore the fullness of the climate justice story from our own lived experience – the grief and fear in the destruction in equal part to the precious connection we nurture as part of Earth community.  We will also invite you, the audience, to share some of your fears, hopes and questions during these firey times.

 

Performance Dates & Time:

Saturday, September 28th @ 2pm

Saturday, September 28th @ 7pm

Location:

Majlis Art Garden (majlis meaning “a place to sit” in Arabic)

163 Walnut Ave. (located between Queen & King, a few blocks West of Bathurst St.)

This venue is an intimate and whimsical indoor/outdoor space – so please do bring layers and a blanket if the air is cool.  To learn more visit: www.majlisarts.com

 

Cost:

$20 suggested donation or PWYC (pay-what-you-can)

 

All are welcome – this performance is appropriate for all ages depending on your child’s comfort with hearing and experiencing stories with full range of emotion.

 

InterPlay is an improvised practice that invites us to play with our birth right of sound, song, storytelling, movement, dance and stillness.  It is a chance to connect to our deep inner wisdom, create space for the diversity of stories within us to be told and affirm what brings us joy and hope in life. To learn more visit: www.interplay.org

The Fire Within: The Stories the Earth Speaks Through Us

We are at a time when we are being called to put focus on our relationship to the Earth, the fires burn loud to draw and keep our attention.   Overwhelmed, seeming like nothing can be done, we unite to touch into the complexities of our relationship to the Earth, to ourselves as an expression of the land, to our desire to exist in harmony.  The journey of climate crisis and justice is full of all that life offers and with it comes many stories and the spectrum of emotion. 

 

The Fire Within: Stories the Earth Speaks Through Us will be an improvised InterPlay performance where we explore the fullness of the climate justice story from our own lived experience – the grief and fear in the destruction in equal part to the precious connection we nurture as part of Earth community.  We will also invite you, the audience, to share some of your fears, hopes and questions during these firey times.

 

Performance Dates & Time:

Friday, September 27th @ 7pm

Saturday, September 28th @ 2pm & 7pm

 

Location:

Majlis Art Garden (majlis meaning “a place to sit” in Arabic)

163 Walnut Ave. (located between Queen & King, a few blocks West of Bathurst St.)

This venue is an intimate and whimsical indoor/outdoor space – so please do bring layers and a blanket if the air is cool.  To learn more visit: www.majlisarts.com

 

Cost:

$20 suggested donation or PWYC (pay-what-you-can)

 

All are welcome – this performance is appropriate for all ages depending on your child’s comfort with hearing and experiencing stories with full range of emotion.

 

InterPlay is an improvised practice that invites us to play with our birth right of sound, song, storytelling, movement, dance and stillness.  It is a chance to connect to our deep inner wisdom, create space for the diversity of stories within us to be told and affirm what brings us joy and hope in life. To learn more visit: www.interplay.org

Music for Climate Justice 3

Music for Climate Justice 3 – A benefit for ecojustice and the 2019 Climate Strike Week
All Ages!
Music, sing alongs, art, food, drinks, silent auction

When: Friday Sept. 20th
Doors – Come early, meet friends, look at art, eat, drink, be merry – 6:30pm, live music 7:30pm
Silent Auction Closes – 11pm
Stay for the last band until midnight!

Where: Tranzac Main Hall – 292 Brunswick Ave.

Cost:
$15 – general
$20+ – generous donor
$5 – $10 – students, underemployed

Line Up:
Moscow Apartment
Néo Givord-Serrano
Cassie Norton
Annie Sumi
Amateur
Brian Coffey and the Feel Good Band