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Research awards highlight CMDI鈥檚 focus on how art, humanities can empower progress

Research awards highlight CMDI鈥檚 focus on how art, humanities can empower progress

A visitor to Ucross uses a smartphone to experience Confluences, a site-specific sound experience in Wyoming. Photo courtesy Ucross Foundation.

Can art bridge the increasingly precarious divide between Americans?

Headshot of Teri Rueb

If so, Teri Rueb said, it鈥檚 not likely to be something you see in a gallery or a museum. It鈥檚 one reason her canvas is typically a landscape that invites people using a particular space to slow down and be moved by the sound she introduces into particular places.

鈥淲hen we talk about other people from other parts of the country, it seems we don鈥檛 even start from a place of basic humility鈥攍ike respect for how you live, or what your culture is, or the history of where you live,鈥 said Rueb, a professor of critical media practices at 色戒成人直播鈥檚 College of Communication, Media, Design and Information.

Rueb is one of six CMDI professors to win Arts and Humanities grants through the university鈥檚 Research and Innovation Office. It鈥檚 an impressive feat, with CMDI faculty claiming one-quarter of the 20 grants awarded this year; four of the college鈥檚 seven academic departments were recognized with funding.

The CMDI faculty recognized with grants are:听

  • Steven Frost, assistant professor, media studies. Threads of Resistance: Sampling Labor Histories Through the Lowell Mill Textile Archives.
  • Zannah Matson, assistant professor, environmental design. Mine-o-Polis: A Board Game About Mining and Extractive Capital.
  • Hillary Rosner, assistant teaching professor, journalism. Studies in Nature: Lichen.
  • Shawhin Roudbari, associate professor; Sophie Weston Chien, chancellor鈥檚 postdoctoral fellow, environmental design. Dark Papers: Advancing Forms of Design Justice Discourse.
  • Rueb, professor of critical media practices. Confluences: Mobile App-Based Site-Specific Soundwalk and Website Archive.

鈥淲e鈥檙e not trying to replace the peer-reviewed journal. Instead, we鈥檙e asking, what are the conversations you need for a journal article?鈥

Sophie Weston Chien, chancellor鈥檚 postdoctoral fellow, environmental design

The Dark Papers project is an initiative of , a collective of educators, researchers and thinkers that鈥檚 critically re-examining design education and practice to be more inclusive.

鈥淒ark papers are really just short, quick, urgent conversations鈥攁lmost research seedlings,鈥 Chien said. 鈥淚t is both a record in time and a way to connect and expand dialogues that are happening.鈥

There is a strong activist strain to this work, which is designed to bring an antiracist perspective to problems in design and architecture. It aims to do so by bringing more voices to the table, including some who have been excluded or underrepresented in academia.

鈥淒ark papers fit in a larger ecosystem of the college, where we have faculty and students doing interesting work in things like extraction, or disability justice,鈥 Roudbari said. 鈥淎nd a bunch of them also do creative dissemination models to raise awareness of these issues.鈥

Headshot of Shawhin Roudbari

The grant will help Dark Matter U complete some badly needed blocking and tackling, like making its website accessible and paying for transcription services. But the project is already getting attention in the professional world, including that examined topics like design justice and how to transform professional practice.

鈥淲e鈥檙e not trying to replace the peer-reviewed journal,鈥 Chien said. 鈥淚nstead, we鈥檙e asking, what are the conversations you need for a journal article? And how can those conversations be their own kind of instigator to move these ideas forward?鈥

, is a site-specific sound experience already installed at Ucross, which hosts artists in residency at its Wyoming location, situated amid working ranches. The region is unique鈥攊t鈥檚 been shaped by agriculture and resource extraction, but is close to arts communities and, of course, Ucross itself. Visitors to the campus who download a free mobile app can hear voices from the community鈥攍ocal ranchers, past artists and field recordings鈥攁s they wander the landscape.

Headshot of Sophie Chien

The sense of connection in Confluences isn鈥檛 just about the land visitors can see, but its original inhabitants. During the course of the project, she worked with Native historians, ethnobotanists and astronomers to better incorporate the narratives of Indigenous people in her art.

Confluences, which Rueb created alongside interdisciplinary artist Laurids Sonne, soft launched earlier this year, and is scheduled to formally debut in August.

鈥淭he project has this opportunity to bring people from very different walks of life together, and maybe make the rural-urban dichotomy become more porous,鈥 Rueb said. 鈥淭here鈥檚 simply not enough unscripted, unaffiliated, nonpartisan public space for debate and dialogue at this moment. If we can change that in the tiniest measure, giving amplification to the diversity of walks of life that make up our country, maybe that would help mend some old wounds, and find new ground for conversations.鈥 听