Josh Wodak is a transdisciplinary researcher and artist whose work transforms climate science into visceral and embodied experiences of climate change, by metaphorically mapping audiovisual representations of change onto human and nonhuman landscapes. Formally trained in visual anthropology (University of Sydney) and interdisciplinary cross-cultural research (Australian National University), his work has been presented as performances, screenings, installations, and exhibitions in art galleries, museums, theatres, performative spaces, cinemas, and festivals across Australia and internationally. His research, entitled “Good [Barrier] Grief” (2011–present), uses photomedia, video art, sound art, sculpture, and interactive installations to explore environmental ethics and the moral quagmire of synthetic biology and geoengineering in the context of the biophysical and civilizational challenges brought about by the advent of the Anthropocene. In 2014 he convened the symposium “The Anthropocene: Artists and Writers in Critical Dialogue with Nature and Ecosystems” at the Humanities Research Centre, Australian National University, and co-convened the University of New South Wales symposium “Fighting Fire with Fire: Climate Modification and Ethics in the Anthropocene.” He is associate lecturer in Art and Design at the University of New South Wales, and an honorary research fellow in the Faculty of Architecture, Design and Planning, University of Sydney.