ED13F-0916
The Land of the Summer People, a multidisciplinary educational experiment in flooding

Monday, 14 December 2015
Poster Hall (Moscone South)
Seila Fernández Arconada, University of Bristol, Water and Environmental Engineering, Department of Civil Engineering, Bristol, United Kingdom and Thorsten Wagener, University of Bristol, Civil Engineering, Bristol, United Kingdom
Abstract:
Our changing climate brings with it unpredictable extreme weather events.Therefore working creatively with communities to generate sustainable solutions becomes vital, to be more resilient to an uncertain environmental future. The Land of the Summer People (TLOTSP) is an experiment regarding the unstable relationship between society, water and place by exploring flooding impacts in Somerset (UK). Using creative and scientific methods this multidisciplinary project applies participatory research to understand societal responses to extreme weather events, including academics, practitioners and local communities to generate an open dialogue from the local to the global (climate change).

TLOTSP is a joint project between and artist and an engineer. During this project the artist developed a number of creative activities to facilitate dialogue with both engineering students and local artists working together in the case study: Flooding in Somerset Levels and Moors. Each working group generated a particular method to work in collaboration, together with locals in Somerset, while also creating an artistic outcome as a result of the process. We worked around communication looking at how disciplinary training [academics] acquire the capacity for the specialised “coding” of information, a language that detaches from the wider apprehension. We asked whether art could offer a language to facilitate the process of "decoding” knowledge. In addition, we looked at how communities affected by extreme weather events perceive and communicate the historical context, realising that responses are determined by living memory rather than archival history. This helped us to understand how short-term connections with nature have shaped the way we live today.