The following events have featured performances from We Hear You—A Climate Archive (updated July 2024):
77 Messages to the Future Dramaten, Stockholm, Sweden (April - May 2024) Written & Directed by Jacob Hirdwall Featuring Filip Alexanderson, Anna Björk, Elin Klinga, Christopher Lehmann, Razmus Nyström, Tina Pour-Davoy, Nina Zanjani, with Patrik Andersson Walle, Farah Bayoudh, Patrick Brännfors, Otilia Manstad, Annie MC Williams, Simon Sandqvist, Cia Norberg Söderman, Elvira Rosling, Ida Vainionpää (full credits)
Letters to Earth Company | E, Washington, DC, USA (April 2024) Presented by the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History as part of “The World & Me: Exploring Earth’s Diversity” Featuring Philip Baraoidan, Ryan Carlough, Tara Ashley Compton, AJ Guevara, JaMyra LaSalle, Horizon Miguel, Kelsey Rohr, Hannah Wojszynski
We Hear You: A Process Talk Swedish American Institute, Minneapolis, MN, USA (March 2024) Featuring Caitlin Nasema Cassidy and Helene Larsson Pousette
The Role of Creative Climate Movements in Dispelling Climate Pessimism The Children & Youth Pavilion, COP28, Dubai, UAE (December 2023)Featuring Parneet Kaur and Big Wind Carpenter Presented in collaboration with Poetry for Planet
Labour of Love: A Poetry Slam on People and Planet! The Just Transition Pavilion, COP28, Dubai, UAE (December 2023)Featuring Parneet Kaur and Big Wind Carpenter Presented in collaboration with Poetry for Planet, Entertainment and Culture Pavilion, International Labor Organization—Just Transition Pavilion, and European Commission
When Will the Water Come? An Evening of Performance Inspired by Water The Lab for Global Performance and Politics, Georgetown University, Washington, DC, USA (November 2023) Curated and Directed by Ashanee Kottage Featuring the students of Prof. Derek Goldman’s Global Performance and Politics course and Climate Change Theatre Action Presented in collaboration with the Georgetown Earth Commons
Sustaining the Oasis: Envisioning the Future of Water Security in the Gulf Georgetown University in Doha, Qatar (November 2023) Curated and Directed by Ashanee Kottage Featuring Ashanee Kottage
European Union State of the Arts Night Hirshhorn Museum, Washington, DC, USA (April 2023) Directed by Caitlin Nasema Cassidy and Jacob Hirdwall Featuring Abigail Devine, Dina Hirdwall, Ashanee Kottage, and Lyndi Tsering Presented by the Delegation of the European Union to the United States and the Hirshhorn
SIREUS Chancellors Forum and Members Forum House of Sweden, Washington, DC, USA (February 2023 and May 2023) Featuring Ashanee Kottage, Kelly Perry, and Helene Larsson Pousette Presented by SIREUS and Embassy of Sweden
New York Times Climate Forward COP27, Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt (November 2022) Directed by Caitlin Nasema Cassidy Featuring Caitlin Nasema Cassiy and Ashanee Kottage Presented by the New York Times Climate Forward
“Sustainable Planet, Sustainable Health” Stockholm+50 (UN General Assembly), Stockholm University, Stockholm, Sweden (June 2022) Directed by Jacob Hirdwall Featuring Melinda Kinnaman and Razmus Nyström Hosted by Stockholm University, Karolinska Institutet, KTH Royal Institute of Technology, and Stockholm Environment Institute as part of the Stockholm+50 convening by the General Assembly of the United Nations
We Hear You—An Evening of Youth Climate Storytelling at COAL + ICE John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, Washington, DC, USA (March 2022) Directed by Caitlin Nasema Cassidy Stage Management by Julia Beu Assistant Direction by Jameson Nowlan Featuring Ashanee Kottage, Elliot Williams, Lilli Hokama, Myiah Smith, and Nadia Nazar Presented by The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts and Asia Society Production Assistant Joseph Ravago
We Hear You: A Global Dialogue with Youth Artists and Activists New York Theatre Workshop and Rattlestick Playwrights Theater, New York, NY, USA/Virtual (June 2021) Featuring Kiyo Gutierrez, Isuri Wijesundara, and Beatrice Dolores Moderated by Caitlin Nasema Cassidy Presented as part of the 2021 Global Forms Theater Festival
We Hear You: An Earth Day Roundtable Georgetown University, Washington, DC, USA (April 2021) Featuring Beatrice Dolores, Ashanee Kottage, Pauline Owiti, Eliza Palter, and Myiah Smith Moderated by Caitlin Nasema Cassidy Presented by The Earth Commons—Georgetown University’s Center for Environment and Sustainability and Georgetown Humanities Initiative as part of Voices on the Environment series
MORE PROJECT EVENTS COMING SOON!
We Hear You—A Climate Archive is a collaboration between Dramaten (The Royal Dramatic Theatre of Sweden), The Earth Commons—Georgetown University’s Institute for Environment and Sustainability, The Embassy of Sweden in Washington, DC, and The Laboratory for Global Performance and Politics. We Hear You—A Climate Archive is co-conceived by Caitlin Nasema Cassidy and Jacob Hirdwall. Funding has also been made possible by the Swedish Arts Council, Barbro Osher Pro Suecia Foundation, and The Puffin Foundation, Ltd.
Wijdan Al Khateeb (she/her, Producer) is a Palestinian producer based in Doha, Qatar. She earned her BS in Media Industries and Technology at Northwestern University in Qatar and is currently pursuing a MA in Women, Society, and Development at Hamad Bin Khalifa University in Qatar. Her work and research focus on Palestinian women. As a producer, she has worked on The NU-Q Creative Media Festival, as well as award-winning films Tick Tock and Refuge, both of which premiered at Ajyal Film Festival. Wijdan served as Project Specialist for The Supreme Committee for Delivery & Legacy/FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 and as Creative Media Intern with Qatar Foundation. In addition to producing, she currently works for Qatar Foundation in the Community Development Department as Marketing Coordinator.
Caitlin Nasema Cassidy (she/her, Project Director) is an actor, director, and producer making experimental performance that is physical, collaborative, and poetic. Her practice is rooted in joy, embodied research, and (com)post-activism. Caitlin is a 2023 Grist 50 List Fixer, 2023 Social Impact Community Partner at the John F. Kennedy Center, and the recipient of a 2023 National Performance Network Development Fund Award. She holds the 2022-23 Artist-in-Residence position at The Earth Commons—Georgetown University’s Institute for the Environment and Sustainability and is a proud member of The Actors Center. CaitlinNasemaCassidy.com
Robert Duffley (he/him, Project Dramaturg) is a theater artist, editor, and teacher based in New York City. As a dramaturg, Robert partners with writers, directors, composers, collectives, and institutions to develop new plays and original stagings of classic work. He is particularly committed to international and interdisciplinary projects, with a particular focus on climate. Recent work includes Miranda Rose Hall’s A Play for the Living in a Time of Extinction (Commissioned & Developed by LubDub, currently touring the EU with original direction by Katie Mitchell), Ferry Tales: The Potomac River (Kennedy Center), 1776 (A.R.T., Broadway, National Tour), Claudia Rankine’s Help (Off-Broadway), and We Live in Cairo (A.R.T.). The Founding Dramaturg for LubDub Theatre Co, Robert currently serves as an Adjunct Lecturer at Georgetown University (Fall 2024) and has previously taught at Harvard University and Emerson College. robertduffley.com
Jacob Hirdwall (he/him, Director/Playwright) has for The Royal Dramatic Theatre in Stockholm staged Paralysie générale! (2004-17), Emperor Fukushima (2011), What Is Politics (2012), Another Country (2012), Requiem for an Activist (2012) and We Hear You—Greta Thunberg’s Speeches (2020). On behalf of Swedish Radio he has directed his own play Emperor Fukushima (2011), Kristian Lundberg's The Yard (2012) and Anita Goldman's If I Have To Travel To Los Alamos (2014). Jacob is the artistic director of Ensembleverket and has with that group staged There Is Someone Sitting On the Wing (2010) and the play The Undiscovered Country (2013, also performed in Reykjavik and in New York). He has written and directed the trilogy Landscape With Winter-birds (2015), Sleepwalking In The Nether World (2016, New York 2019) and People Who Disappear (The City Theatre of Stockholm, 2018). In 2019, Jacob made his debut as an author with the novel Picnic At The End Of the Road. Jacob was during 2017-2020 head of The Bergman Studio - a workplace for drama-development. Jacob's play Conversation With Strangers was performed at Athens Democracy Forum in 2022.
Afsoon Pajoufar (she/her, Project Designer) is an Iranian designer of stage and environment for play, opera, and live performance. Afsoon’s artistic practice is often focused on the intersection of space and new technologies including XR and live video. Her works have been presented in venues and festivals including Theatre for a New Audience, Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM), New Ohio Theatre, Bard Fisher Center, HARVARD TDM, MIT, KITCHEN THEATRE, and PRELUDE festival. She received her MFA in Scene design from Boston University and is a proud member of USA829. afsoonpajoufar.com
Swedian Lie (he/him, Project Designer) is a creative consultant and designer originally from and based in Indonesia. He is Co-Founder and Creative Director of Zero One Digital, a holistic branding and digital marketing agency focused on cohesive brand building & storytelling, and VP of Creative at Zero One Group, an integrated technology services company that provides personalized solutions to even the most challenging business problems. He has worked as a scenic designer with Rorschach Theatre, Georgetown University, and Jakarta Players, and as a graphic designer with LubDub Theatre Co., the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, and Studio Theatre, among others. With nearly a decade of experience in branding, digital marketing, advertising, and theatre design, Swedian brings strategic knowledge and design expertise to projects requiring in-depth interdisciplinary practice and international collaboration.
Ashanee Kottage (she/her, Facilitator) is a research analyst at the Earth Commons and the Laboratory for Global Performance and Politics. She is inspired by her experience growing up in Sri Lanka, a beautiful tropical island, and embraces the responsibility to be a steward for homes, her's, and others, that bear severe and disproportionate consequences of climate change. She is a scientist, activist, and storyteller concerned about the security of this earth and the security of people. She is working towards decolonizing conservation, effective science communication, and marrying rigorous scientific research with empathy, embodiment, and performance.
Helene Larsson Pousette (she/her, Project Partner) is a diplomat, curator, and writer, who is currently the Counsellor for Cultural Affairs at the Embassy of Sweden in Washington, DC. Previously, she was the Counsellor for Cultural Affairs at the Embassy of Sweden in Serbia, where she initiated Creative Mentorship Serbia and a bilateral residency program. She has worked at the Swedish Exhibition Agency, Swedish History Museum, and Swedish Institute, curating interdisciplinary exhibitions that unite heritage, history, and contemporary art. As co-founder of the Stockholm Museum of Women’s History, she develops methods for progressive archiving, archive excavations, and contemporary collecting. She has been a member of the Swedish National Heritage Board and International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance. She initiated ARKIVISM, a handbook on how to navigate archives and archive yourself. In 2021, she published her book on curating and exhibition processes.
Dramaten/The Royal Dramatic Theater is Sweden's national stage and the host of the International Ingmar Bergman Festival. The CEO is Maria Groop Russel. As of March 1, 2020, Mattias Andersson is the artistic director. dramaten.se/en
The Earth Commons—Georgetown University’s Institute for Environment and Sustainability is an internationally recognized home for innovative education, groundbreaking research and transformative action on the environment and sustainability at Georgetown University. earthcommons.georgetown.edu
The Embassy of Sweden in Washington, DC is one of Sweden’s largest missions and serves as the official link between Sweden and the United States. The Embassy of Sweden is located in House of Sweden, a physical representation of Swedish values such as openness, transparency and democracy, and the flagship of Sweden’s public diplomacy in the United States. houseofsweden.com
The Laboratory for Global Performance and Politics humanizes global politics through performance. We cultivate a distinctive global community of collaborators that includes students, emerging and established artists, educators, policy leaders, and activists. Our work harnesses narrative, memory, and acts of witnessing with the aim of sparking transformation and change. globallab.georgetown.edu
Asia Society
Center for Law and Social Policy / New Deal For Youth
COAL + ICE
The Collaborative on Global Children’s Issues
Delegation of the European Union to the United States
Entertainment and Culture Pavilion
European Commission
New York Theater Salon
Georgetown Humanities Initiative
Georgetown University School of Foreign Service
Georgetown University Office of the Vice President for Global Engagement
Global Forms Festival
Hirshhorn Museum
International Labor Organization—Just Transition Pavilion
Karolinska Institutet
The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts
KTH Royal Institute of Technology
The New York Times Climate Forward
Poetry for Planet
Rattlestick Playwrights Theater
SIREUS
Smithsonian Museum of Natural History
Stockholm+50
Stockholm Environment Institute
Stockholm University
Swedish American Institute
The Hirshhorn Museum
The European Union
(Updated July 2024)
Asif Majid
Jennifer Peacock
Miranda Rose Hall
Devika Ranjan
Abigail Devine
Joan Cassidy
Center for Native American Youth
“We Hear You—A Climate Archive on the World Stage” Robert Duffley, Howlround (July 2024)
“Jacob Hirdwall låter unga berätta i klimatpjäs: ‘Aktivism är ett uttryck för framtidstro’” Dagens Nyheter (April 2024)
“I gave it a story, and in return, it gave me community, solidarity, and hope” Ashanee Kottage, Dramaten (April 2024)
“In the Future There Is No History” Jacob Hirdwall, Dramaten (April 2024)
“We Hear You—A Climate Archive announces global call for climate storytellers” Georgetown Earth Commons (April 2022)