Well Beings
Some of the events are available as videos in our Mediathek.
In this online publication, all events are presented once again.
In Well Beings, an interactive installation by the artist Valentina Karga, visitors can confront their feelings, worries and fears about the climate crisis. Due to the immediate consequences of climate change, more and more people suffer from a chronic fear of doom, which is accompanied by feelings of helplessness, anger or guilt and can lead to panic attacks, nervousness, sleep disorders and even depression. The market has responded to this anxiety with a huge range of consumer products such as weighted blankets, hug pillows and stuffed animals. These objects inspire Karga and form the starting point for her work. At the same time, she discovered idols - prehistoric figures of abstracted creatures made of marble and clay - in the museum's Antiquities Collection. For the artist, they represent a distinct cultural heritage, and symbolize a closeness to nature. Using natural and recycled materials, she has created figures and forms based on the idols that visitors can touch and embrace.
Valentina Karga's (* 1986, Greece) work operates between art, design, research and architecture. It draws together elements of socially-engaged practice with experiments that question the existing social and physical frameworks within the realms of energy, economy and sustainability. Since 2018 Valentina Karga has been Professor at the Hochschule für bildende Künste (HFBK), Hamburg.
The exhibition will be accompanied by a public programme (see details below), "Well Beings in Times of Climate Anxiety", conceived by Seda Yildiz and Valentina Karga. The supporting programme is a project of HFBK Hamburg and the Hamburg Open Online University (HOOU).
Programm
Presentation and discussion: “Can the arts degrow? Changing the pace in the midst of the climate crisis
When: 26. April, 6 pm
Whith: Daphne Dragona (Curator & Writer, Berlin)
Where: Aula, HFBK Hamburg
Aufnahme der Veranstaltung in unserer MediathekClimate distress - working and living in a time when the familiar is dying
When: 26. April, 7 pm
With: Steffi Bednarek (Climate psychologist, UK)
Where: Aula, HFBK Hamburg
The acknowledgement of the reality of the climate and ecological crisis and its impact on us and our families and loved ones is both necessary and painful. A certain amount of climate distress is an aspect of living at this consequential moment in the history of humanity. In this webinar, the Climate Psychologist Steffi Bednarek will offer an insight into the psychological aspects and impacts of climate change and suggest working practices that support and normalise climate related emotions at work and in our private lives.
Aufnahme der Veranstaltung in unserer MediathekResonant Encounters
When: 29. April, 3 pm
With: Marlies van Hak (Editor and researcher, Utrecht)
Where: Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe Hamburg
Marlies van Hak will tune in to moments of attentive listening and encounters with water. The reading will explore the porous lines between lived experience and language - resonating personal memories and critical reflections. It will take place in an intimate setting, and hold space for dialogue and exchange.
Sound Bath
When: 29. April, 4:15 pm
With: Janina Tanck (Sound Energy Practitioner, Hamburg)
Where: Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe Hamburg
Experience pure relaxation to the sound of the crystal bowls. During a Sound Bath, the sound will spread through your entire energy field. Sounds have a profound effect on our body, mind and spirit. Because of the high percentage of water (70-80%) in our bodies and because our bones carry vibrations 40x better than air, everything in us is vibrated, activating the body's self-healing process. Together we will meditate and bath in the sounds.
Reading Group with Valentina Karga and design class of HFBK
When: 17. May, 11 am
Where: Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe Hamburg
Lucy Lippard, “Overlay: Contemporary Art and the Art of Prehistory”, 1983
Reading Group with Valentina Karga and design class of HFBK
When: 24. May, 11 Uhr
Where: Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe Hamburg
Lucy Lippard, “Overlay: Contemporary Art and the Art of Prehistory”, 1983
More research and discourse on the topic of climate anxiety
- academic contributions of Panu Pihkala on GoogleScholar
- Podcast Climate Change and Happiness
- article: Panu Pihkala, The Process of Eco-Anxiety and Ecological Grief: A Narrative Review and a New Proposal, 2022