FACT’s 2020 programme The Living Planet has dealt with themes such as climate change, ecology, and community building. This leads us directly into our 2021 programme, which will focus on questions around migration, and its significance to us both as a species and more personal understandings of identity.
During this programme, and the research for next year, the importance of exploring different ways of seeing and communicating have been central: how we might change and challenge the way we understand the world around us, and our place within it. Fixed perspectives restrict us, but there is an opportunity to use art, digital culture and readily available tools to overcome these barriers: to disrupt the norm, establishing stronger forms of empathy and updated notions of community.
In the present moment, it is vital that we open ourselves up to different voices and understandings. It is also more urgent than ever to question those systems of which we are all a part, and how our actions affect not only our immediate environment, but our entire ecosystem. Digital platforms have been a vital tool for all of us during this time, and as such many of us are rethinking how we engage with the technologies all around us: of the power that they hold, and the systems of power they can be used to either reinforce or expose.
Within this context, to invite new voices into the organisation and bring new perspectives to what the future holds for digital culture, Jerwood Arts and FACT announce three residency opportunities through a new Fellowship programme.