David Haley

David makes art with ecology, to inquire, learn and teach. He publishes, exhibits and works internationally with ecosystems and their inhabitants, using images, poetic texts, walking and sculptural installations to generate dialogues that question climate, species and cultural crises, urban systems and transdisciplinarity for ‘critical recovery’ and ‘capable futures’. He, also, works as a consultant on biological recycling and urban farming projects, creates online educational resources and lives on Walney Island.

David’s work includes: VIEWPOINT (2016-19), a dialogue between some lakes, a catchment of rivers, a confluence, the people of Cockermouth and time. A Walk on the Wild Side 2004-18) / Walkabout the City (2015-16) urban ecology performed through acts of community walking; Making Our Futures: the Art of Sustainable Living (2008- 20) research, learning and teaching to survive Climate Change in China, Taiwan, Spain and Manchester; Life Support System (2012-13), Five Elements for Hong Kongers living with Climate Change; Meantime… Desert Poetics (2012-13), a poetic mapping of global desertification; A Dialogue with Oysters: the Art of Facilitation (2008- on-going), a new creation myth emerging from the mingling of freshwater and rising seas; The Writing on the Wall (2007-19), a series of poetic texts, written and performed to challenge our response to Climate Change in Germany, Taiwan, and the UK. 

David is an independent artist, ecopedagogue and Visiting Professor at Zhongyuan University of Technology; Vice Chair of the CIWEM Art & Environment Network; Mentor/Advisor (founder) of Futures’ Venture Foundation; a Trustee of Chrysalis Arts Development, Art Gene and Barrow’s Beautiful Places; a member of the ecoart network, UK Urban Ecology Forum, Ramsar Cultural Network and an idea…. From 2007 to 2016, he was a Senior Research Fellow and Director of the Ecology In Practice Research Group, Manchester Metropolitan University.

davidhaley@yahoo.com 

http://davidhaley.uk/  

www.facebook.com/david.haley.39794895

www.davidhaley7.academia.edu 

https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2778-5031

    Life Support System, 2012, Kowloon, Hong Kong.
Bamboo Eco Pavilion, commissioned by Chinese University Hong Kong and Five Elements Project for the Kai Tak River Festival.
Life Support System, 2012, Kowloon, Hong Kong.
Bamboo Eco Pavilion, commissioned by Chinese University Hong Kong and Five Elements Project for the Kai Tak River Festival.
VIEWPOINT: Keys to the Future, 2018, Cockermouth, Cumbria.
Photograph of ash tree at the confluence of the rivers Cocker and Derwent. HLF supported project, commissioned by Riversmeet Community Coop.
Valeria Vargas, Fabrizzio Cocchiarella, Eddie Fox.  Pomona Encounters. 2016. Manchester.
Postgraduate Landscape Architecture students from Manchester Metropolitan University questioning urban development that eradicates wildlife from mature brownfield sites.
VIEWPOINT: Towards the Sunset, 2019, Cockermouth, Cumbria.
One of twelve rocks with Haiku poems, installation at the confluence of the rivers Cocker and Derwent. HLF supported project, commissioned by Riversmeet Community Coop. (carving Pip Hall).
A Dialogue With Seagulls, 2019, Art Gene, Barrow-in-Furness, Cumbria.
Eighty-one Haiku poems, written onto the gallery wall in charcoal, for Extreme Views: Think Tank exhibition. Commissioned by Art Gene.
A Walk On The Wild Side, 2005, Manchester.
One of many Wild Walks in Manchester and other places, with communities to consider how we might live with climate and species crises in urban futures. Commissioned by Urbis, Manchester; funded by Arts Council North West and Manchester Metropolitan University.

2 thoughts on “David Haley

  1. Hi David , this looks great, I believe you come to China regularly , I am based in BJ . Although I dont work with waterways , more of a tree person, but they are linked . Dr Cathy Fitzgearld suggested I look you up . If you are passing through BJ we might meet up for a bowl of noodles?

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  2. Niamh, hi. Thanks for your comment. Since 2019 I have been working remotely with Jin Lipeng at Sichuan Fine Arts Institute who are doing really good ecological arts development on campus and with many communities – jin.lipeng@hotmail.com

    Meanwhile, don’t forget that every tree is dependent on water and water is dependent on trees.

    If you pass through the UK, please come to visit for some fish and chips.

    All the best, David

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