Produced by the European Commission (JRC), Union for the Mediterranean, Global Water Partnership –Mediterranean,and Eurecat, the “Gateway for the Future of the Mediterranean” is a book which combines science and art to examine the water-energy-food-planetary health nexus. It is an innovative and explorative disclosure of scientific knowledge, employing culture and arts in a visually compelling way and enhanced with modern features such as Augmented Reality and animations. The book will be officially launched at the UN 2023 Water Conference in the Walks of Water. Some of the artwork within the book would be included in the Walks.
For centuries, half of the Ancient Mediterranean World has remained invisible. The lives of the women of antiquity have been, to a great extent, ignored. While the myths of Medusa, Arachne, or the Sphinx are famous, we know little about what daily life in the past meant for women. In a period in which goddesses were as powerful as gods, why was it that the status of women was so low and why was female intelligence and beauty demonised?
In Mediterranean societies, men traditionally benefit from a historical link between land ownership and community leadership. Women have always been discriminated against and affected negatively by decisions related to water, energy or food. Such gender dynamics are influenced by cultural and socio-economic realities. Women who have challenged traditional thinking have been demonised and depicted as an evil force defying the patriarchal status quo.
To shape one’s future, one needs to understand one’s past. If society is to defy the anachronistic situation of women, mythological female characters must be reinterpreted. This would permit an open discussion aimed at inducing a behavioural change capable of leading to a social acceptance of the WaterEnergy-Food-Ecosystem Nexus. Only with a true and equal partnership between the sexes can Nexus-based solutions realise their full potential.
The Medusa-Nexus concept aims to address the issue through emotional stimuli and engagement. Naming without blaming is key to the generation of the empathy required to induce behavioural change. Eight paintings by the Polish artist Natalia Głowacka reinterpreting female characters from Mediterranean mythologies are accompanied by the portraits of eight modern Mediterranean women by the Spanish photographer and artist Montserrat “Moon” Capel. The testimonies of women who work with water, energy, food or the ecosystem interact with the paintings by way of Augmented Reality and Artificial Intelligence. The past interacts with the future. A ninth painting encapsulates the experience and constitutes a mirror, the reflection of which encourages women of today to realise their potential.