In Cyprus, water has been shaped by partition and postcolonial state-building, turning it into something divided. But through collective imagination, water can also be seen as a shared commons.
In his research Decommonisation of Water in Divided Cyprus and arts practice Printed Geographies, Nicolas Mouros explores how water moves across military bases, buffer zones, and dividing lines - and how these drivers strip it of its common value. He questions the idea of scarcity, showing how water is often abstracted and depoliticised.
Nicolas is a conscientious objector and environmental activist from Cyprus. He studied Human Geography, focusing on the political ecology of water in divided Cyprus. He is currently pursuing a degree in Multi-disciplinary printmaking, where he experiments with the visual - affective - political and ecological.
You can follow Nicolas’ work on Instagram Printed Geographies
Andrew, James, Tessa, Bise, Mimi & Lauren.