This PhD project is for an artist scholar to investigate creative practice-led responses to climate change as part of a multi-year Vice Chancellor Research Fellowship project titled Staging Weather. The successful PhD candidate will work both independently and as part of a supportive transdisciplinary team led by Dr Jo Pollitt.
Project Title: Creative responses for increased human-environment connection amid unstable climate futures
This project invites an artist scholar to interrogate artistic responses to climate change through practice-led research. The PhD candidate will join a transdisciplinary team led by Dr Jo Pollitt for a multi-year Vice Chancellor Research Fellowship project building on the WA Weather Studios within the larger research project of Staging Weather. The project brings together artistic, meteorological, and First Nations weather knowledges, to develop nuanced human relations with place-based weather amidst the instability of climate change (Pollitt et al 2022). The project is based at WAAPA, ECU, Mount Lawley, and the future City Campus (opening in 2026) and linked to ECU’s Centre for People, Place and Planet.
With the recent increase in remote forecasting, there is an urgent need to communicate place-based weather literacies in the here and now in ways that engage and mobilise people of all ages. The successful PhD project will attend to the phenomena of increasing disconnection felt by many humans in the face of their immediate experience of weather.
To be eligible for this scholarship applicants must:
People identifying as First Nations or from underrepresented groups are especially encouraged to apply.
Please send your CV and a brief (one-page) EOI addressing the criteria to Jo Pollitt. by February 15th 2024.
In responding to the criteria please include:
If successful at EOI stage, candidates will be required to submit a formal course application.
Questions about this scholarship can be directed to Jo Pollitt.