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l e a h c r a i g

  • BIO
  • NEWS
  • CURRENT PROJECTS
    • Attending Knotweed
    • Tangled Connections: Knotweed, Resilience, and Local Ecology
  • TEACHING AND PEDAGOGY
    • Art and the Environment: Strategies for Critical Engagement
    • Public Space and the Politics of Representation
    • Art in Nature
  • ARCHIVE
    • COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT
      • Our Place: Peace Dome
      • Our Place: Nests
    • INTERACTIVE + PERFORMANCE
      • In Progress: Performing Grief
      • Your Future is Bright
      • Shower Talk
      • Expiration Challenge
      • Much Unseen is Also Here
      • Transportative Embodiment
      • N 42° 23’ 17.04”, W71° 13’ 11.81”
    • PHOTO + VIDEO
      • Fields Corner: A Gastro-Performative Sampling
      • Tubescape: Circulatory System
      • Tubescape: Beach Crawl
      • A Tourist's Devotional
    • SCULPTURE
      • Trellis
    • ORGANIZING
      • Howard Art Project 2011-2015
  • CONTACT
Peace Dome installed at Lunder Arts Center

Insect ecologist Dr. Amy Mertyl, environmental scientist and artist Dr. Nicole Weber, and interdisciplinary artist Leah Craig worked together to guide cohorts of elementary school students through collaborative STEAM (science, technology, engineering, arts, and mathematics) projects resulting in a multi-part art installation, Our Place. Together with students, they explored local ecology and its interconnectedness with human experience, looking closely at ways that habitats in the more-than-human world inform architectural design in the built world. The title Our Place broadly addresses the idea of a site where living beings—including humans—can experience life-sustaining qualities such as rest, nourishment, safety, and belonging.


Sixth grade students created Peace Dome in response to the Uvalde school shooting.


Photo credit: Elise Parker


All images copyright Leah Craig

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