As climate change reshapes seasonal rhythms, the temporal structures that once structured landscapes, bodies, and built environments begin to destabilize. Season Creep brings together reflections on phenological change, ecological precarity, and the uneven pace of transformation. Through writing, drawing, and documentation, the issue explores how seasonal knowledge—once rooted in cycles of cultivation, migration, and celebration—is being reconfigured, and traces what it means to inhabit a world where seasons no longer arrive as expected.
Sara Frikech
Artistic Research Landscape Theory Environmental Documentation Transdisciplinary Studies Visual Essays Season Creep Phenological Shift Climate Change Adaptation Ecological Precarity Temporal Urbanism Landscape Architecture Urban Studies Urban Ecology Spatial Practices Architecture and Environment