Slaughterhouse Walls and Animal Eyes by Abney TurnerPosted on November 21, 2022November 18, 2022 When we look into the eyes of an animal, we do not just see but are seen. Interdisciplinary SeminarResearchanimals anthropocene psychoanalysis
Urban Eco-Memorial by Andrew Turner PoeppelPosted on September 9, 2021 Ecological art and memorial design in the Anthropocene Arts WorkshopResearchanthropocene architecture design ecology loss memory monument Nature
What We Will Remember by Adele Liu KramberPosted on September 18, 2020 A VR Exhibit for "The Man with the Compound Eyes" Interdisciplinary SeminarPortfolio21st century anthropocene collective memory literature memory natural disaster tourism
A Political Ecology of Plastiglomerate in Kaʻū, Hawai’i by Benjamin WeingerPosted on December 10, 2019April 27, 2021 An inquiry into the plastics on Hawaiian shores that centers the colonized and occupied homelands on which these objects are formed Independent ProjectResearchanthropocene colonialism decolonize environment hawai'i indigenous peoples land Plastic
Criss Cross: The NYU Gallatin Podcast by The EditorsPosted on November 4, 2019April 22, 2021 Episode One: Overflow AudioGallatin GalleriesInterviewanthropocene art collaboration curation environment podcasts
Plastic(ine) Desires by Kai SundermannPosted on May 17, 2019April 15, 2021 PLASTICS + TECHNO-UTOPIAN ALLURES // PLASTICS + OILY TEMPORALITIES // PLASTICS + ZOMBIFICATION OF FOSSILISED SUNSHINE // PLASTICS + TOXICITY // PLASTICS + QUEER FUTURITY CriticismFeaturedIndependent Projectanthropocene haunting Plastic
Future/Phantoms by Ngozi NwadiogbuPosted on March 6, 2019March 13, 2024 Visions beyond the Anthropocene Interdisciplinary SeminarVideoanthropocene earth environment film haunting Nature storytelling
Paul Schrader’s Environmental Ethics by Hannah SeidlitzPosted on March 5, 2019April 8, 2021 How First Reformed fights climate change by paying homage to Andrei Tarkovsky and Hieronymus Bosch Creative NonfictionCriticismIndependent Projectanthropocene christianity climate change environmentalism film
Toward Relational Monsters by Juliana Fadil-LuchkiwPosted on November 8, 2018April 1, 2021 "Rather than waiting around for an apocalypse, how can the monster play as a queer reimagining of relations for carrying on together?" CriticismMA Programanthropocene monsters