Skip to main content Skip to main navigation Skip to page-level navigation Go to the Disability Resource Centre Website Go to the DRC Booking Accommodation Portal Go to the Inclusive Technology Lab Website
The University of British Columbia
The University of British Columbia Okanagan campus
UBC Okanagan News
  • Research
  • People
    • Student Profile
    • Faculty Profile
    • Alumni Spotlight
  • Campus Life
    • Campus News
    • Student Life
    • Teaching & Learning
  • Community Engagement
  • About the Collection
    • Stories for Media
  • UBCO Events
  • Search All Stories
Home / 2026 / March / 05 / Where art meets science in the woods
Arts & Humanities, Campus Life, Campus News, Community Engagement, Community Events, Research, Science

Where art meets science in the woods

New UBCO Woodhaven residency connects research, storytelling and environmental questions

March 5, 2026

A female artist pauses for a photo in her busy studio.

Artist Nina Vroemen is teaming up with Dr. Julian Self for the first FEELed Lab residency, where the pair will work on an interdisciplinary research and storytelling project.

A new research lab, tucked into the heart of Kelowna’s Woodhaven Nature Conservancy, will explore creative and scientific collaborations and push possibilities in both research areas.

The FEELed Lab, UBC Okanagan’s Faculty of Creative and Critical Studies’ newest research centre, is located at the Woodhaven Eco Culture Centre. This spring, it is piloting an Artist-and-Scientist-in-Residence program that brings artists and scientists together to collaborate in a shared space.

The FEELed Lab is a feminist environmental humanities field research facility that brings together students, researchers and community members interested in environmental and sustainability issues from feminist, queer, anti-colonial and disability justice perspectives. FEELed is a play on words for the field work undertaken in this research facility.

The residency will explore environmental and climate justice questions, and bring artists and scientists together to learn from each other and try new ideas. Participants will look at how creativity and scientific research can overlap, explains Astrida Neimanis, Director of the FEELed Lab and Canada Research Chair in Feminist Environmental Humanities at UBC Okanagan.

“I am often struck by the fact that for both artists and scientists, the work emerges from the same place: care for and curiosity about the world,” she says. “But in contemporary universities, art is often treated as the polar opposite of science.”

Artist Nina Vroemen and scientist Dr. Julian Self are teaming up for the first residency to work on an interdisciplinary research and storytelling project. Vroemen uses ceramics and glaze chemistry to explore the ecological and cultural stories that materials carry, while Self studies material science, observing how salts dissolve, crystallize and transform in different environments.

The collaboration is driven by a curiosity about how substances reveal themselves and interact over time, and how watching these processes can create both scientific knowledge and an ecological story, explains Vroemen.

“Together, we explore how artistic and scientific approaches illuminate material processes and the stories they carry, creating a space for dialogue across disciplines,” she adds.

Vroemen and Self will spend 10 days next month in the Okanagan conducting fieldwork and working with students and faculty at the FEELed Lab. They will use Woodhaven’s art studio for storyboarding, writing, research, and to compare their artistic and scientific processes.

“We are excited for this opportunity to share our passions and methods with each other, hopefully creating something more impactful than either could accomplish on our own,” says Neimanis. “In this time of climate catastrophe and political crisis, we need all hands on deck.”

The residency will culminate with an installation featuring printed images, sketches, notes, research papers, diagrams and evolving storyboards.

On March 9, between 2 and 4 pm, the public is invited to the Woodhaven Eco Culture Centre for an open studio and workshop to learn more about this residency.

For more information, visit: thefeeledlab.ca/the-woodhaven-feeled-lab-artist-and-scientist-in-residence-asir-2

Media Contact

Patty Wellborn
E-mail: patty.wellborn@ubc.ca

Content type: Media Release
More content from: Faculty of Creative and Critical Studies

Related content

Two people dressed up with green hair and costumes perform on stage.

Ten years in, Pony Cabaret keeps pushing queer culture forward

Annual variety show spotlights queer and allied performers at a new venue

February 23, 2026
Art students examine a number of pieces of art.

UBCO’s Art on the Line gala returns with art, food and fundraiser

Lottery-style art draw gives guests an original piece to take home

March 02, 2026
A robot arm holds a Valentine's heart

Love, loneliness and the chatbot next door

UBC Okanagan experts look at what AI companions offer—and what they can not

February 12, 2026

Trending Stories

  • UBCO study debunks the idea that the universe is a computer simulation
  • Minutes matter most when exercising to control blood sugar
  • Why co-op matters
  • Undergraduate students help turn science fiction into reality
  • The wall that pushes back
All Stories
Contact Media Relations

About UBC Okanagan

UBC’s Okanagan campus is an innovative hub for research and learning founded in partnership with local Indigenous peoples, the Syilx Okanagan Nation, in whose traditional, ancestral and unceded territory the campus resides. The most established and influential global rankings all consistently place UBC in the top three per cent of universities in the world, and among the top three Canadian universities.

The Okanagan campus combines a globally recognized UBC education with a tight-knit and entrepreneurial community that welcomes students and faculty from around the world in British Columbia’s stunning Okanagan Valley. For more visit ok.ubc.ca.

Discover more about UBC Okanagan

Find a Program Admissions Book a Tour UBCO Facts
UBC Okanagan Campus News, University Relations

Innovation Precinct Annexation 1 (IA1)
3505 Spectrum Court
Kelowna, BC Canada V1V 2Z1

We respectfully acknowledge the Syilx Okanagan Nation and their peoples, in whose traditional, ancestral, unceded territory UBC Okanagan is situated.

 

Search all stories

Subscribe to receive news by email

Visit UBC's Vancouver news room

Global and Admin Messages

News

Okanagan Campus

TikTok icon Linkedin icon

UBC Okanagan News
Okanagan Campus
3333 University Way
Kelowna, BC Canada V1V 1V7
Find us on
  
Back to top
The University of British Columbia
  • Emergency Procedures |
  • Terms of Use |
  • Copyright |
  • Accessibility