The name Cosmologyscape weaves together cosmos, the interconnectedness of all things, and landscape, the terrain we inhabit and observe. Cosmologyscape emerged from gatherings organized by the artists in 2020 with Black and Indigenous communities to dream and heal collectively. Rooted in honor and ancestral tradition, the project unfolds through participatory retreats and workshops that encourage reflection on individual and communal dream practices. Online, shared dreams are transplanted into digital quilt squares using symbolic systems informed by Lakȟóta philosophy, Afrofuturism, and Black quilting traditions. The resulting body of multidisciplinary artworks spanning textiles, digital animation, furniture, and sound, builds upon these symbolic systems employing computational methods to create spaces of rest and collective imagination.
“At Wagner Foundation, we work with artists who we believe can have a deep impact on the most pressing political and social concerns that affect our everyday lives, and we know that algorithms and machine learning both expand possibilities and create cause for concern,” states Abigail Satinsky, Wagner Foundation Senior Program Officer & Curator, Art & Culture. “Kite and Wormsley bring to bear the voice of community and ancestral perspectives on these technologies, creating a critical opening for dialogue that we’re eager to share with Boston.”
For Welcome to Cosmologyscape, Wormsley and Kite were invited to reflect on their methods of dreaming and making. This new body of work expands their research through a series of interconnected forms: a contextual diagram created with design studio Omnivore; furniture co-produced with Indigenous students from the University of Manitoba; and a “dream office” inviting visitors to rest, reflect, and enter the imaginative space of the project.
The project is grounded in ethical technological protocols that prioritize care for communities, land, water, air, and future generations. Free, prior, and informed consent is central to the artists’ data governance practices. Dreamers’ data is collected, securely managed, and intentionally destroyed, countering extractive data-harvesting practices. In return, participants receive restorative offerings, including herbal and tea recipes inspired by their dreams.
Continuing to evolve across digital and physical realms, Welcome to Cosmologyscape explores the power of dreamwork while acknowledging that the right to rest, dream, and share knowledge is shaped by race, class, place, and circumstance.
In partnership with the Wagner Gallery’s commitment to investing in artists’ visions, Kite and Wormsley are supported through a research grant by Wagner Foundation to work deeply within Boston-area communities to co-create a dream retreat and 2026 Summer Solstice public day of dreaming to envision a repeatable, rooted model for community-based dreamwork and technological collaboration. Cosmologyscape was first presented as a public art project by Creative Time in 2024, curated by Diya Vij with Arantza Orengo, Project Manager.