Vega, Norway

By Sally PilkingtonUncategorized
Devon Fredericksen
Devon Fredericksen
Vibeke Steinsholm
Vibeke Steinsholm

For at least 400 hundred years, and possibly as many as a thousand, the bird keepers of Vega, Norway have linked themselves to the common eider duck. This relationship between wild ducks and humans is a mutualistic one, in which eiders benefit from the houses and nests that the humans build, and the people benefit from the down that is ethically collected at the end of each nesting season. This tradition has been recognized by UNESCO as culturally significant, and the Norwegian government even provides a small stipend to each bird keeper to help pay for the costs of their care. Unfortunately, seabird populations are declining around the world, including the common eider, making the work of the bird keepers even more urgent. In Vega, a tension exists between forward progress in the modern world and the “old-fashioned” ways of island life. Some bird keepers, like Vibeke Steinsholm, are working to preserve the tradition of eider tending and stoke the interest of the younger generations. Scientists, anthropologists, artists, and government officials have been working together to create multidisciplinary approaches and alliances through the project “Fuglan Veit,” which aims to employ a more-than-human approach to eider duck conservation. Keeping this link alive is about more than just continuing an age-old practice; it’s about seeing humans as part of the natural world, not separate from it.

Eider Ducks

Eider Ducks

Amsterdam, Netherlands

By Sally PilkingtonUncategorized
Viola Karsten

‘Zoöp’, playing on the Greek ‘zōḗ’ for life, is short for Zoöperation. It is the name for a new organisational model and learning process that aims to incorporate non-human perspectives into decision making concerning regenerative practice. In a Zoöp, the interests of the ecosystems in which the organisation is situated and participates are actively represented in the decision making. A Zoöp is committed to learn to contribute to the health of these ecosystems.

The Goethe-Institut Niederlande and Zoöp De Ceuvel organise a residency program for artists interested in this innovative model of more-than-human decision making in Amsterdam from June 19 to 29, 2025. This initiative is part of a larger transnational effort organized by EUNIC Netherlands (European Union National Institutes for Culture) and coordinated by DutchCulture and Nieuwe Instituut Rotterdam, in collaboration with the Zoönomic Institute. The aim of this project is to explore and amplify the role of multispecies ecosystems in urban environments by fostering regenerative connections between humans and non-human life.

Zoop - a form of organisation for cooperation between human and nonhuman life

Zoöps

Vienna, Austria

By Sally PilkingtonUncategorized
Konstantin Deininger
Konstantin Deininger
Claudia Hirtenfelder
Claudia Hirtenfelder

Vienna has the potential to be a great habitat for many wild urban animals. Unfortunately, many people are unaware of the diverse species cohabiting the city with them. As a result, there is little awareness of these animals’ lives or their well-being. Even worse, some wild urban animals, like pigeons, are often perceived as vermin, much like rats.

Fortunately, in the heart of Vienna, a bat sanctuary provides refuge for injured bats from up to eight species, fostering hope for multispecies cohabitation. Adjacent to it, in the inner courtyard, a home for city pigeons has also been established.

Members of the Vienna Animal Studies group—including researchers from geography, philosophy, and economics—will gather at the bat sanctuary to explore the relationships between bats, pigeons, and urban life. Their discussions will serve as inspiration for scented candles and poetry.

Also, the project serves as a basis for developing a podcast series which will explore the philosophy of hope in relation to urban animals.

Bat

Bats

North Jutland, Denmark

By Sally PilkingtonUncategorized
Jes Lynning Harfeld
Jes Lynning Harfeld

What would it mean to think in terms of multispecies co-habitation when humans build, expand and renovate our homes? We will be looking at the very foundation of a multispecies society – the connectedness and overlapping of the homes of animals and non-human animals.

Fox

Foxes