What is the role of socially-engaged public art in the context of our accelerating environmental crisis?
Join UP Projects on Thursday 11 September 2025 in Liverpool for a half day symposium exploring regenerative principles and practices. The symposium will bring together expertise and insights from artists, curators, and environmentalists.
Through panel discussions and dynamic workshops, the symposium will explore the role public and socially engaged art can play in the climate and biodiversity crises. It aims to raise the ambition for what it means to be environmentally responsible both technically and culturally.
The symposium will equip participants with theoretical frameworks, case studies from best and emerging practices, as well as practical tools from the world of public art commissioning and beyond. Sharing learnings from UP Projects’ Bodies of Watercommissions, the symposium will explore the human relationship to nature through the prism of water cultures, water management and hydropolitics.
The symposium itself aims to be environmentally responsible with production principles that aim to reduce our carbon footprint, including avoiding unnecessary printing, minimising waste, prioritising speakers based in the UK and encouraging sustainable travel methods for all delegates. UP Projects has a long-term commitment to Environmental Responsibility, including commissioning work that addresses the climate emergency and sharing knowledge around innovative approaches to commissioning public art that have a net positive environmental impact.
The Bodies of Water Symposium is curated by UP Projects and guest curator Justine Boussard, in partnership with the Liverpool Biennial.
The symposium is part of Bodies of Water, a national, site specific public art commission by German/Korean artist Anne Duk Hee Jordan that explores the human relationship with the natural world, presented at A la Ronde in Exmouth, East Devon and Haigh Hall in Wigan, Greater Manchester.
Bodies of Water is commissioned and curated by UP Projects working in partnership with National Trust and Wigan Council. It is generously funded by Arts Council England, Art Fund and Vallum Associates, and supported by Goethe-Institut with engineering support from Civic Engineers.
Thank you to UP Projects’ Critical Friends Pauline Desouza, Diversity Arts Forum and Bridget McKenzie, Regenerative Culture for advising on the project.
Location:
The Black-E, 1 Great George Street, Liverpool L1 5EW
Time:
Thursday 11 September 2025, 12.30pm – 6.30pm
Access:
British Sign Language interpretation will be available during specific panel discussions and breakout activities. Please refer to the symposium schedule below to see which activities will include BSL. The venue is wheelchair accessible with ramps, lifts and toilets available. To enter the venue via the ramps provided, please use the entrance via Sankey Street (off Great George Street).
If you have any specific access needs or questions regarding the accessibility of the venue, please email info@upprojects.com in advance of the symposium, and they will assist where possible.
Venue