Abstract
This article builds upon the commonalities of artistic practices in connection with the relationships between territory, body, and the Anthropocene. By investigating the territory as a "co-author" of our individual and collective narratives, we shed light on the artistic interventions and/or performative actions we carried out during the artistic residencies of the socially engaged project Sensitive Territories, specifically in two island places of Guanabara Bay, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil: "Z-10 Colony" and "Paquetá Island". By observing how the environmental issues that affect these places can be addressed through artistic practices, we seek the ways in which the micropolitical and imaginary dimensions can be reinforced or restored in light of the current global climate crisis.
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