ɫɫÀ²

News

‘Environmental art education should address the problem of human-centeredness’

Henrika Ylirisku asks whether the approaches of environmental art education are sufficient in times of eco-crises. She proposes a new theoretical approach to the field.
Henrika Yliriskun väitös taidekasvatuksen alalta tarkastettiin Aalto-yliopistossa maaliskuussa 2021.

What is your research about?

‘In my dissertation, I look at art education, which addresses environmental issues and seeks to promote cultural and ecological sustainability. My research is driven by considerations of whether existing approaches of environmental art education are sufficient in a time of ecological crises.

I paid particular attention to the theoretical and philosophical groundings of environmental art education. I found out that environmental art education does in many ways seek to challenge a human-centered and instrumental relationship with nature, but does not go far enough in these criticisms.

In my research, I set out to develop a new orientation for environmental art education. In recent posthumanistic thinking, I look for concepts and theories that would allow for a better understanding of the complex intertwinement of nature and culture. Using an artistic experiment based on orienteering, I outline how a new kind of theoretical thinking can help in reorienting environmental art education.’

What's important in it?

‘My research brings together and develops further an area of ​​art education that is particularly topical at this time. I show that while environmental art education can be influential and comprehensive, its tradition is problematically tied to the presumptions of Western humanistic thinking. The presumption of the human as exceptional and as autonomous individual brings along contradictions to the ways in which the relationship between human and nature in environmental art education is treated and articulated.

I suggest that environmental art education should engage with theories that allow unpacking human exceptionalism."

Henrika Ylirisku

I think it is important to look critically at how we can build more sustainable futures. There is a lot of talk that our lifestyles should change and that we should learn to act in more responsible and sustainable ways – but do we offer appropriate approaches to that? Do we identify problems, limitations and potential internal inconsistencies in the approaches we have chosen?

I suggest that environmental art education should engage with theories that allow unpacking human exceptionalism. It is important to pay attention to multispecies relationships and different interdependencies. There is a need for concepts and theories that acknowledge the complex entanglement of human and nature, nature and culture, and human and nonhuman.’

Where can it lead to?

‘My research opens paths and visions for future environmental art education. It also addresses the need to continue rearticulating and theorizing the groundings for environmental art education. However, there already are many good existing practices in the field: they are often boldly experimental and encourage cross-disciplinary cooperation.

For art educators and others interested of linkages of art and environmental education, the research proposes a theoretical frame for developing further art pedagogical practices and research. It invites pedagogies that take into account undisciplined thinking, ambiguity, uncertainty and multiple ways of knowing.

The artistic approach makes it possible to deal makes it possible to deal with tensions associated with living in a time of ecological crises through practices that are experimental, critical, creative and functional. Indeed, environmental art education can help to create new stories of lives in common worlds, in which man is not at the center, but as one actor among other actors. It can bring queerness and complexity to the one-sided stories where humans only save and protect, or destroy and are careless.’

Henrika Ylirisku defended her thesis Reorienting Environmental Art Education 19 March, 2021 at Aalto University.

  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

ARTEFAKTI exhibition - photo: Lauriina Markkula
Cooperation, Studies Published:

ARTEFAKTI24

The second iteration of ARTEFAKTI, the graduation exhibition of Contemporary Design MA programme.
Person sits inside large circular opening in wall, wearing black shirt, grey trousers and white hat.
Studies Published:

Student Sarah Asfar balances studies and competitive sports in her daily life

Sarah Asfar, who plays badminton at a competitive level, studies Energy and Mechanical Engineering at Aalto University. What particularly interests her about the field is its relevance to the future and the practical nature of the studies. The flexibility of the program has allowed Sarah to pursue elite sports and part-time work alongside her studies.
An illustrative figure comparing disease-induced immunity (left) and randomly distributed immunity (right) in the same network. Illustration: Jari Saramäki's research group, Aalto UIniversity.
Research & Art Published:

Herd immunity may not work how we think

A new study from researchers at Aalto University suggests that our picture of herd immunity may be incomplete — and that understanding how people are connected could be just as important as knowing how many are immune.
AI applications
Research & Art Published:

Aalto computer scientists in ICML 2025

Department of Computer Science papers accepted to International Conference on Machine Learning (ICML)