I am an academic, curator of contemporary art, and museum professional. I create and study interdisciplinary curatorial and artistic processes with specialist research interests in art and environment, with European and global contexts, natural history collections and decolonizing practices. My teaching and research explore contemporary art, exhibition histories, visual culture, and curating from the twentieth century to the present.
Currently I am an Associate Lecturer. Prior to this I was British Academy Postdoctoral Fellow. I started the fellowship at University of Bristol in in the History of Art department and at the Centre for Environmental Humanities in 2019, before transferring to the Courtauld Institute of Art in September 2021.
I have recently been awarded a Research Fellowship in the UKRI Network Plus: 鈥楽hifting Global Polarities: Russia, China, and Eurasia in Transition鈥.
My postdoctoral research project, entitled 鈥楻outes into the Anthropocene: an interpretative method for 50 years of art and environment artworks, 1970 to 2020鈥, describes histories and consequences of human interventions into the natural world through the proposition of the Anthropocene. Despite the critiques of the Anthropocene 鈥 notably in reference to western European world-making and its lack of differential responsibilities, as implied in imperialism, capitalism, racism, and their effects 鈥 the concept signals a shift in thinking through human-environment relations. I focused on contemporary artists鈥 positions in dialogue with other disciplines and cultures, interrogating migration as productive principle for the co-existence of nature and humans. Through contemporary artists鈥 works I investigated nature as cultural practice that speaks not only to multiple readings and areas of expertise, but that extends into questions of coloniality, environmental care and just sustainability.
My research has been published in the monograph Photography, Ecology and Historical Change in the Anthropocene: Activating Archives (Routledge, 2024) as part of the series Photography, Place, Environment (series editor: Prof Liz Wells).
The book connects photography, archives, ecology, and historical change, and critically applies the Anthropocene as framework to the in-depth study of artists鈥 projects. It discards single modes of seeing environmental transformations in favour of a multiple and de-centred environmental imagination. The study not only makes available original research into newly discovered archives, but also shows how this research is manifest in exhibition formats. I present international, transhistorical projects by contemporary visual artists who use archives together with photography as documentary and performative media for the comparative study of environments and places.
My thesis Contemporary Art, Archives and Environmental Change in the Age of the Anthropocene (2017) resulted among other in the award-winning publication Chrystel Lebas. Field Studies: Walking Through Landscapes and Archives (Fw:Books, 2018); Kraszna-Krausz Foundation Best Photography Book 2018. I curated many contemporary art projects for the natural history museums in London (2005鈥2013), including 骋补濒谩辫补驳辞蝉 (2012鈥2013); After Darwin: Contemporary Expressions (2009); Lucy + Jorge Orta: Amazonia; Mark Dion: Systema Metropolis (2007); The Ship: The Art of Climate Change (2006); Tania Kovats TREE (2009), as well as in Berlin, including Elizabeth Price BERLINWAL (Kunst/Natur, Braus, 2019).
I have developed multi-disciplinary research capacity within museums, such as in the Research Department at Science Museum Group and in the Collection Care Research Department at Tate.
Studies
I was doctoral Reid Scholar in the departments of Geography and Drama, Theatre & Dance at Royal Holloway, University of London. I hold an MA in Curating Contemporary Art from the Royal College of Art and studied Conservation of works of art on paper at Camberwell College of Arts, both in London.
Selected recent publications
Arends, B. (2024). Photography, ecology and historical change in the Anthropocene: activating archives, London: Routledge.
Arends, B. (2024). Seeing the Anthropocene through montage: John Akomfrah鈥檚 Vertigo Sea and Elizabeth Price鈥檚 BERLINWAL. Environmental Humanities 16(3), 530鈥553, https://doi.org/10.1215/22011919-11327300
Arends, B. (2024). Joy Gregory and Philip Miller Seeds of Empire in Black Anthropocenes. Third Text, 38(3), 293鈥314. https://doi.org/10.1080/09528822.2024.2394293
Arends B. (2022). Making plants mobile. Transports of Delight exhibition, Danielle Arnaud Gallery.
Sturm U., Heyne E., Hermann E., Arends B., . . . Wagner S. (2022). Anthropocenic objects. Collecting practices for the age of humans. Research Ideas and Outcomes 8:e89446.
Arends, B. (2021). Unequal Earth: contemporary artists鈥 practices and environmental ideas in modernity. Ronald Gr盲tz and Maike Wei尾pflug (Eds), NaturKultur. G枚ttingen: Steidl.
Arends, B. (2020). Walking through Ge(ssenwiese). In Cassandra Edlefsen Lash (Ed.), Susanne Kriemann,听Ge(ssenwiese) K(anigsberg). Library for radioactive afterlife (pp. 34鈥66). Leipzig: Spector Books.
Arends, B. (2020). Plants in the urban night. In M. Gandy & S. Jasper (Eds.), The botanical city (pp. 139-145). Berlin: Jovis.
Arends, B. (2020). Decolonising natural history museums through contemporary art. In C. Rossi-Linnemann & G. de Martini (Eds.), Art in science museums. Towards a post-disciplinary approach (pp. 213鈥223). London: Routledge.
Arends, B. (2019). Animal acts. In B. Scherer, O. von Schubert and S. Aue (Eds.), W枚rterbuch der Gegenwart, Berlin: Matthes & Seitz.
Arends, B. (2019). Courtyard 3: a sensuous and fantastical journey. In A. Hermannst盲dter (Ed.), Art/Nature. Interventions at the Museum f眉r Naturkunde Berlin (pp. 172鈥177), Berlin: Braus.
Arends, B. (2018). A cohort of trees, photographs, scientists, an artist and a curator: the collaborative study of environmental change, Interdisciplinary Science Reviews, 43(1), 24鈥39, DOI: 10.1080/03080188.2018.1436227
Selected recent presentations and public engagements
‘Tales of two islands: landscapes, gardens and weather in Joy Gregory and Philip Miller鈥檚 Seeds of Empire (2021) Project’, international workshop 鈥楢rt, Beauty, and Visualizing Social Change: The Politics and Aesthetics of Environmental Photography鈥, Amerika-Institut, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universit盲t, Munich (2025).
‘Seeing truth in museums: Jane Wildgoose and Daniel Boyd at the Natural History Museum, London, 听conference at Conway Hall, London, with Tasmanian Aboriginal artist Janice Ross and British artist Jane Wildgoose (2025).
‘Afrofutures and aquatic worlds in contemporary art, Applied African Science Fiction Project, Centre for Environmental Policy, Imperial College London (2024).
Keynote lecture 鈥楻outes into the Anthropocene: alternative narratives and dis-orientations鈥, MedienKunst, PEER to PEER festival, Forum Freies Theater, D眉sseldorf (2023).
鈥楥urating oceans鈥, UEA Norwich (2023).
鈥榯he being of another species鈥: contemporary artists鈥 strategies to embody extinction, Linnean Society (2023).
鈥楧ecolonising Natural Histories: Re-imagining Museum Practices between Europe and Latin America, Natural History Museum Neuch芒tel (2023).
British Art Network seminar 鈥楲andscape and the Environmental Emergency鈥 (2021).
鈥極n montage and repair: 鈥淐umulative destructions and new beginnings鈥濃, University of East Anglia, Norwich (2021).
Keynote lecture 鈥榁isualising the Anthropocene through montage鈥, Bauhaus Dessau (2020).
鈥楢ctivating photographic collections in natural history museums: Chrystel Lebas and Klara Hobza鈥, Valand Academy, Gothenburg (2020).
鈥楨mpire and Ecology: activations by contemporary artists of collections at the Natural History Museum in London鈥, Paul Mellon Centre, London (2020).
鈥楥urating the object in the Anthropocene鈥, University of Birmingham and Oxford University Museum of Natural History (2020).
In conversation with Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing, House of World Cultures, Berlin (2018).
鈥楶hotographing the landscapes of the Anthropocene: Nguyen The Tuc鈥檚 Kohle unter Magdeborn, c. 1976鈥, London Group of Historical Geographers (2018).
Research interests
- Anthropocene narratives and alternative propositions as interpretative methodologies for works of art.
- Politics of natural sciences collections and collecting practices.
- Montage as epistemic structure for engagements with and representations of environments.
- Transhistorical approaches in artistic and curatorial practices.
- Re-performances of archives and collections.