When: Friday 14 November 2025, 3pm - 6pm
Where: Crozier Tower Bridge, 2 Mandela Way, London, SE1 5SS
Time: 3pm- 6pm
Format: Panel discussion followed by 15 minute film screening of Replika
Moderator: Caitlin Southwick, Founder and Executive Director, Ki Culture
Panelist:
- Lotta Lindquist-Brosjo, Managing Director, Europe & Asia, Crozier
- Dr Ferdinand Saumarez Smith, Director, Factum Foundation London
As the world faces the urgent realities of the climate crisis and social justice issues, we now face reimagining how art is created, transported, preserved, and shared. This panel explores a holistic vision for the future of art, one that balances environmental responsibility, technological innovation, and social equity. From rethinking the carbon footprint of shipping and storage to transforming climate control practices, we will discuss how museums, galleries, and artists can adapt to a rapidly changing world without compromising the integrity or accessibility of cultural heritage.
Drawing on case studies and practical examples, the conversation will connect technical challenges to broader issues of access and inclusion, addressing how more flexible and sustainable systems can open new opportunities for institutions and communities globally. The discussion will also consider how technology can enhance art and museum practices: improving efficiency, reducing carbon, and expanding the ways audiences experience and engage with art. By bringing together voices from leaders in conservation, logistics, community engagement, and Indigenous relations, this session envisions a collaborative, equitable, and truly sustainable future for art.
To RSVP click here. Spaces are limited.
The Future of Art: Sustainability, Access, and Innovation, hosted by Crozier is part of London Art+Climate Week, a multi-day event of exhibitions and activations across London focused on climate action in the arts. Presented by Gallery Climate Coalition and gowithYamo, London Art+Climate Week runs parallel to COP30 from 12-16 November. Learn more here.
After the panel discussion there will be 15 minute private screening of the feature film: Replika
REPLIKA Synopsis
On the border of the Upper Xingu Indigenous territory of Brazil, a sacred cave is vandalized, threatening a community’s collective memory.
REPLIKA is a meditation on memory, identity, loss, and rebirth as a full-size replica of the cave is conceptualized, delivered, and installed in the village in order to transfer knowledge to a new generation.
This film invites us to reflect on the ancestral knowledge of the Wauja people and how technology and Indigenous wisdom can merge as an act of resistance.
Directed by Piratá Waurá (Xingu Territory) and Heloisa Passos (São Paulo), the film exists as a reflection on collaboration through ritual, presented entirely in the local Indigenous language and made with support from young Xinguan community members.
To read more about the sacred Kamukuwaká Cave click here.

