Gallery
Please find here the approved applications to the Social Art Award 2021 – New Greening. The open call was closed on 1 May.
The next Open Call for the Social Art Ward will be opened in 2023.
Title:
The Community Bee Clinic
The Community Bee Clinic
Author:
Lisa Korpos
Lisa Korpos
Description:
The Community Bee Clinic is a radical veterinary practice and participatory installation where visitors can become emergency caregivers for dying honeybees. Through the performance of interspecies nursing care and use of speculative biomedical objects, participants are invited to engage with non-human bodies in new ways and at new scales. This socially-engaged Sci-Art project was developed in collaboration with the Nieh Lab at the University of California, San Diego, where the health, environmental stressors, and communication of social bees are studied.
The Community Bee Clinic is a radical veterinary practice and participatory installation where visitors can become emergency caregivers for dying honeybees. Through the performance of interspecies nursing care and use of speculative biomedical objects, participants are invited to engage with non-human bodies in new ways and at new scales. This socially-engaged Sci-Art project was developed in collaboration with the Nieh Lab at the University of California, San Diego, where the health, environmental stressors, and communication of social bees are studied.
Description:
The Community Bee Clinic is a radical veterinary practice and participatory installation where visitors can become emergency caregivers for dying honeybees. Through the performance of interspecies nursing care and use of speculative biomedical objects, participants are invited to engage with non-human bodies in new ways and at new scales. This socially-engaged Sci-Art project was developed in collaboration with the Nieh Lab at the University of California, San Diego, where the health, environmental stressors, and communication of social bees are studied.
The Community Bee Clinic is a radical veterinary practice and participatory installation where visitors can become emergency caregivers for dying honeybees. Through the performance of interspecies nursing care and use of speculative biomedical objects, participants are invited to engage with non-human bodies in new ways and at new scales. This socially-engaged Sci-Art project was developed in collaboration with the Nieh Lab at the University of California, San Diego, where the health, environmental stressors, and communication of social bees are studied.