Imagination Squared: A Community Conversation about Resilience

Beth Gavrilles

Tuesday, November 6th, 2018

A small bunch of dried white flowers rests against a backdrop of explosive color atop a 5-inch square of wood. Another square bears a close-up view of a stack of delicate teacups rendered in acrylic paint. And on a third, the word “Beyond” is spelled out in gold glitter across a painted background that conjures a blue sky with puffy white clouds.
 
Apart from their shape and size, these objects could hardly be more different, yet each is an expression of the concept of resilience. Along with 300 others, they are part of Imagination Squared, an ongoing participatory project taking place at the University of Georgia and throughout the Athens community this fall.
 
Imagination Squared was conceived and organized by artist Christina Foard, a student in the Master of Fine Arts program in the UGA Lamar Dodd School of Art. Designed to incite community conversationson a common theme, it is supported with funding from the Odum School of Ecology, Office of Sustainability and Willson Center for Humanities and Arts at UGA, as well as the Athens Area Arts Council.
 
The pilot phase of the project took place during the spring, when Foard distributed hundreds of wooden squares at locations including the art school, the Odum School, and select local middle and high schools. Participants were asked to modify a square to express their thoughts about the meaning of the word “resilience” and return it, along with an optional written statement. Each square was then photographed and uploaded to the project website, imaginationsquared.org/.
 
Phase two of the project is now underway, with squares available across campus and more Athens locations through Nov. 16.
 
Foard deliberately focused on a theme that has different meanings depending on context.
 
“Some choose toaddressthe physical resilience of a material, or use symbols to infer a collective resilience througheconomicor political lenses,” Foard said. “Others interpret a personal resilience and identify the heroes of culture and history, their family members and their own strategies tocope with change and challenges.”
 
Katie Brownson, a doctoral candidate in integrative conservation and ecology, covered her square with colorful fungus and lichen to talk about ecological resilience.
 
“Fungi can adapt to take advantage of diverse food sources, enhancing their resilience to a changing environment,” she wrote. “Fungi also support the resilience of ecosystems by providing networks that strategically allocate resources to soil life and plant communities and by degrading contaminants.”
 
Brownson said she enjoyed thinking about an ecological concept in a new way.
 
“It’s something I’ve never done before, but I like any opportunities to incorporate more creative forms of expression into the way we communicate our science,” she said.
 
That is exactly the kind of experience Foard was hoping to prompt with the project.  
 
“To me, this is a thinking prompt, a visual StoryCorps of sorts, a community connecting point using a common substrate and a common theme. It looks like an art project, but it is much more,” she said. “Although participants are challenged initially to consider how they might reflect their individual ideas in this 5-inch format, it is ultimately about belonging to something bigger than themselves.”
 
Information about how to participate, including where to find squares, is online at imaginationsquared.org/. Foard noted that couples, families, small businesses or social groups can work together to modify a square as a team, considering collective interpretations of resilience. And for those who prefer to express their ideas about resilience in audio format—through music, spoken word or sound recordings—a limited number of audio squares are available upon request.