Let's Talk
Submit your interdisciplinary work and join our community to shape a future where all species thrive together.

Jane Scobie
Jane Scobie is an interdisciplinary visual artist whose work explores the fluid boundaries between living and non-living matter, the human and the non-human. Jane’s participatory and performative practice challenges species hierarchies and questions our relationship with nonhuman entities, using materials and processes with a low environmental impact. Recent work explores the strandline, a ‘living system’ as material, model and metaphor to understand our relationship with the ocean in the context of climate breakdown.
Jane has an MA in Arts and Science from Central Saint Martins, UAL. Recent work has been nominated for Clifford Chance/UAL Sculpture 2025 Award, NOVA 2024 and shortlisted for Maison/0 This Earth Award. Recent exhibitions include at BOTH Gallery, London with NeoMeta (Julia Shu), Ground Work Gallery for Art and Environment, Hypha Studios and Lethaby Gallery in London, residency at Joya: Air International Art and Environment Residency and subsequent presentation of works in Gas Holder Park, London, Outdoor sculpture trail at Wild Ken Hill - a project to restore nature, fight climate change, and grow healthy food across a coastal farm in West Norfolk.

NeoMeta
NeoMeta* (Julia Shutkevych) is a transdisciplinary multimedia artist and practice-based researcher. Through immersive audiovisual art and experimental fieldwork, NeoMeta explores the interconnectedness of life and non-life within the universe's entropy. By blending physical and digital realms, she creates interactive, non-anthropocentric experiences that treat living, found, and discarded beings as active co-creators and collaborators. Learning from and with Nature, NeoMeta's research and practice integrates scientific and indigenous knowledge for a just, inclusive world where humans, nonhumans, and other/virtual beings flourish in harmony within diverse yet shared ecosystems.
Julia holds an MA in Art and Science with distinction from Central Saint Martins, UAL. Her research combines living system behaviour, nonhuman agency and sound ecology to explore the potential for interspecies communication with a recently published paper on Slime Mould Sonification, presented at MOTH Festival of Ideas: Interdisciplinary Perspectives for Earthly Flourishing Conference at New York University and will be published at Artnodes Journal as a part of S+T+ARTS Symposium.
*NeoMeta – my artist name reflecting the fusion of artistic expression and scientific inquiry (‘neo’ – “new”; ‘meta’ – “beyond,” “transcending”). More –> neometa.art