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EU PROJECTS

Locative Media Supercluster (LMS) has a strong track record in international collaborations and funding, and secured support from the British Academy, the British Council, and the European Union. In recent years, LMS has been actively engaged as a partner in several European-funded initiatives under Creative Europe and Erasmus+. These include No One Forgotten – The Art of Connection (2023–2024), Walking Arts and Local Communities (WALC) (2024–2027), and EI Youth – Ecological Intelligence for a Sustainable Future (2026–2028).

No One Forgotten – The Art of Connection (2023–2024)

Locative Media Supercluster was a key partner in the EU-funded Creative Europe project No One Forgotten, creating performances, workshops, and the immersive installation Weaving Connections across Belgium, Greece, Spain, and Portugal. By combining deep listening, embodied movement, and locative media storytelling, they brought together artists with and without disabilities, local communities, and the more-than-human world. Their interactive methods—integrating sound, movement, and digital mapping—made artistic participation inclusive and creative. The project continues through schools, residencies, and festivals, ensuring that No One Forgotten lives on as a growing, collective artwork.

Walking Arts and Local Communities (WALC) (2024–2027)

Locative Media Supercluster, with its collaborative mapping platform CGeomap, brings the digital and participatory dimension to WALC (Walking Arts and Local Communities) in a more than human perspective. Central to their role is the interactive WALC map, a living cartography that geolocates walking practices, artworks, and community stories across Europe. Through a WALC online course and workshops in locative media, LMS and CGeomap empower artists, hubs, and nodes to integrate sound, storytelling, and mapping into their practices, creating site-specific works that address ecological and social issues.

They also lead the Earth Art Revolution installation and platform, which turns community “Earth Stories” into immersive experiences with sound, AR, and digital mapping. This installation and the interactive map are constantly evolving, fueled by contributions from residencies, walkshops, and workshops across the WALC network. Together, they create a dynamic digital commons where local voices connect to transnational narratives of ecology, migration, and community.

EI Youth – Ecological Intelligence for a Sustainable Future (2026–2028)

EI Youth is an Erasmus+ project that empowers young people across Europe to build ecological intelligence and sustainable citizenship through collaborative mapping with its platform CGeomap. By combining digital cartography, storytelling, and embodied learning, the project helps transform climate concerns into ecological intelligence and action.

At the heart of the project is Locative Media Supercluster’s concept of Ecological Intelligence, which provides the methodological framework and technological backbone. Through its open-source platform CGeomap, young people can create interactive maps enriched with images, sound, video, and text. These maps document ecosystems, cultural heritage, and environmental change, connecting local knowledge to global ecological narratives. Supercluster’s expertise in embodied mapping, sensory engagement, and community-based outdoor learning ensures that technology is used not as an end in itself, but as a tool for creativity, activism, and resilience.

supercluster.eu

Collaborative Locative Media

our mission

Supercluster invites world leading scholars and experts in the fields of ecology, humanities, sciences and arts, next to local and indigineous people, to enrich horizontal learning and group creation in processes with collaborative thinking about our planet, in the format of courses, workshops, games, and by creating locative media artworks.

what we do

We coordinate, organize and design collaboratively courses, workshops, educational games, collaborative projects and processes in an integrative approach to relationships with one another and with the more-than-human Earth via locative practices and locative media.

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