We Hear You—A Climate Archive

We Hear You—A Climate Archive

White text reads "We Hear You: A Climate Archive" on a background aerial shot of a fall forest
We Hear You—A Climate Archive - COP27

We Hear You  at COP27 Photos/Credit: Craig Gibson, The New York Times

Excerpt of Ocean Optimism by Ashanee Kottage as part of We Hear You – A Climate Archive at COP27

We Hear You—A Climate Archive is a collaboration project with Dramaten (The Royal Dramatic Theatre of Sweden), The Earth Commons—Georgetown University’s Institute for Environment and Sustainability and The Embassy of Sweden in Washington, DC We Hear You—A Climate Archive is co-conceived by Caitlin Nasema Cassidy and Jacob Hirdwall. Additional support for this project is provided by the Swedish Arts Council and Barbro Osher Pro Suecia Foundation.

Inspired by Greta Thunberg’s urgent question “Can you hear me?, ” this project seeks to amplify—and record for future generations—the ways that today’s young people are experiencing changes in the fundamental forces of the earth. We Hear You—A Climate Archive includes a two-year series of curated international performances and the launch of a digital platform for global climate storytelling.


We Hear You—A Climate Archive‘s official website is now live
at
aclimatearchive.com

WE HEAR YOU- A CLIAMTE ARCHIVE ANIMATED LOGO

Four women and one man stand in a line on stage, holding hands, in front of a snow-capped mountain range backdrop
The inaugural cast of We Hear You, which debuted on March 18, 2022 at the Kennedy Center. Photo by Wolf Hertzberg

The performance series officially launched with an evening of climate storytelling on Friday, March 18, 2022 at the COAL + ICE exhibition presented by the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts and Asia Society. An ensemble of DC-area youth artists and activists presented an original performance weaving their own experiences with the words of Greta Thunberg.

Following its launch in DC, We Hear You—A Climate Archive will commission 77 additional stories from young people around the world. These commissions will inform the launch of a digital platform for global climate storytelling, as well as a multi-year international curated performance series, culminating in a performance at Dramaten directed by Jacob Hirdwall.

We Hear You—A Climate Archive opened the United Nations Stockholm+50 June 1 plenary at Stockholm University. The performance featured Razmus Nyström and Melinda Kinnaman from The Royal Dramatic Theatre of Sweden with text by Greta Thunberg, Lilli Hokama, and Jacob Hirdwall and direction by Jacob Hirdwall.

 

WE HEAR YOU- A CLIAMTE ARCHIVE ANIMATED LOGO

Man seated in a chair on stage reading emphatically from a binder into a handsfree microphone as a woman holds his shoulders and stands behind him

“We need stories about what we love and stand to lose,” says Cassidy. “In this time of global crises, I know I need stories that deliver joy, that offer me ways to root in wisdom and move forward in hope. We Hear You—A Climate Archive is asking: How can we hear the young folk—the artists and activists doing the work of imagining more liveable futures? What can we learn from them—from one another?

Group of students stand in a row onstage and speak into microphones
The inaugural cast of We Hear You, which debuted on March 18, 2022 at the Kennedy Center. Photo by Wolf Hertzberg

We Hear You—A Climate Archive grows from the performance We Hear You—Greta Thunbergs Tal, originally presented at Sweden’s Royal Dramatic Theatre in Stockholm on January 31, 2020. Staged by Jacob Hirdwall and Ada Berger, this performance drew on the texts of Greta’s speeches collected in No One Is Too Small To Make a Difference (Penguin, 2019).

WE HEAR YOU- A CLIAMTE ARCHIVE ANIMATED LOGO