Erinma Ochu
Pervasive Media Studio, Digital Cultures Research Centre and UWE Bristol
Watershed's inaugural Researcher in Residence: storyteller & queer biologist experimenting with how collective consciousness materialises through participatory practices and creative technologies as a form of earthmaking.
The hand that does nothing
Worked on
Murmurations: a mutual research exchange
Research is an earth making practice. It is about recognising that what happens to others relates to what happens to us.
Alternative Technologies: A Just Transition
This workshop series examines technologies and their past, present, and future role in climate justice (and breakdown) and explores what the alternatives could be, through a process of carefully facilitated design thinking
Improvised Human Machine Conversations - Instrumental Extensions and Amputations
Craig Scott was the recipient of Watershed's Patterns in Practice Residency - an opportunity to develop artistic ideas and conversations exploring data mining and machine learning.Erinma Ochu (b. 1972, London) is a storyteller and biologist whose work explores how collective consciousness takes shape through participatory research and creative technologies as a form of earthmaking. Erinma is Wallscourt Associate Professor in Immersive Media at UWE Bristol and Watershed’s Researcher in Residence, where they focus on queering metabolism and cultivating mutual learning towards epistemic justice. Erinma's past fellowships and residencies span Factory International/Jerwood, NESTA Sci-Art, Wellcome, INIVA/Stuart Hall Library and a Racial Justice AI fellowship with LSE and the Ada Lovelace Institute. Erinma was recently appointed Storytelling Champion on Sustainable Research Computing initiative, NetDRIVE.
Erinma's creative research and academic publications span AI and art automation, design justice, storytelling, systems change, participatory research, funding equity and neurodegenerative disease. They are co-editor of the book series 'Digital Materialities and Sustainable Futures', an advisory member of the Royal Academy of Engineering’s Technology Pathways & Meaningful Innovation steering group, a member of both UWE Bristol's Black Professoriate and the leadership team of the Digital Cultures Research Centre. Erinma is an associate member of UWE Bristol's Centre for Sustainable Planning and Environments.
PhD students
Erinma welcomes PhD students committed to centring epistemic justice within their digital/ immersive arts and media practice and the social worlds/ earths that they bring about or foreclose. To support this agenda, working with EarthWatch, Erinma has trained over 75 early career environmental scientists in storytelling techniques to recognise and form solidarity with community-based research and Indigenous knowledge.
My PhD students
Tosin Olufon: Preserving African Folktale Heritage through Virtual Reality and Animation: An Immersive Practice-Based Approach to Cultural Preservation.
Cairi Jacks: Connecting with the more-than-human world through digital art. Read Cairi's paper, Listening to the Land.
Lena Dobrowolska: Co-creating an anti-colonial documentary toolkit for reflecting non-economic loss and damage. Check out Lena's work considering Ways of Repair.
Amanda Egbe: Black and Forth: Understanding Innovation in Black British Artists' Film and Photographic Work. An Autoethnographic Study of Interventions in Film and Media History Through Practice. Check out Amanda's work here.
Completed PhD students:
Dr Holly Broadhurst: Investigating the Efficiency of Environmental DNA (eDNA) for Detecting Terrestrial and Semi-aquatic Mammals. Check out Holly's landmark review on eDNA for monitoring mammals and citizen science paper on volunteers' motivations to get involved in eDNA mammal monitoring.
Ave Kotze: Older adults' lived experience of ‘virtual nature’ in Virtual Reality. Read Ave's article on The Therapeutic Frame: an illusion of the past?
Iyun S Yemi-ShodimuI: Afrofuturism and Science Fictionality as mode. Listen to Iyun's debut album, Seduction of a Hunter as part of duo, GOMID.
As co-founder and co-director of Squirrel Nation, a small design agency that considers co-existence as an ethic, through installations, live events and moving image. Through Squirrel Nation, for five years, Erinma guest curated Sheffield International Documentary Festival's public programme, DocFest Exchange, generating conversations between artists, activists and community organisers around planetary health. Prior industry roles include acting as director and executive producer of digital agency, B3 Media and freelance roles as scriptwriter, script mentor and filmmaker. Erinma is an alumni of the EAVE programme.
I am grateful for a charitable donation from Dr Simon Chaplin and Watershed which is supporting my research, and to Jo Lansdowne for a generative mutual exchange.