The people behind Creative Time Lab: meet Jérémy LeBot 

Jérémy LeBot found us through Nicolas Fieulaine‘s post about Terres du Son, then sat down and read our papers before reaching out. We asked him what was on his mind at that point.

“I was looking for a way to connect art with the behavioral sciences. CTL showed me that theoretical frameworks could be translated into immersive experiences. Proof that I could bring my two academic backgrounds together without compromising scientific rigor or artistic creativity.”

His path runs through decorative painting, social psychology, over a year of emergency housing coordination at RESSIF, and ecological transition. At the time, he says, each transition felt like letting go of a possible future. Looking back, he sees the thread. Skills from each experience still feed how he works now. The paths are converging into a future he hadn’t anticipated, one he finds “far more stimulating and meaningful.”

The RESSIF year shapes how he thinks about public engagement. He puts it directly: many programs fall short because they are designed without consulting the people they are meant to serve. Communication is not tailored to the audience. Eligibility conditions create friction. People disengage.

After his first week, he is wondering about: how does our perception of time as a finite resource influence the choices we make?

He is looking into the CFC and ZTPI scales. He says this perspective is new for him, neither inherently positive nor negative. Depending on the context, it can push him to act with greater intention, or become a source of hesitation and paralysis. Time perception as a lens on choice.

Time is such a fascinating concept! There are so many questions around it! That’s why we never get bored at CTL – many things to explore!

What he is most looking forward to in our work is the moment a project comes to life. Designing projects is largely about imagining the future. Analyzing data is largely about making sense of the past. The encounter itself, watching participants, listening to their experiences, collecting data in real time, those are “rare moments when I am fully immersed in the present.”

And what CTL might help him build: “intervention prototypes in which art is not a layer of aesthetic for an awareness-raising tool, but a central mechanism for change and action.”

Welcome, Jeremy! We are happy to have you with us!

Internship in Project Development, Partnerships & Organizational Strategy   

Are you fascinated by the big questions? What is time? Does the future exist? Do we exist? And most importantly, can we build something funky to explore it all?

We are a quirky, passionate group of psychologists, researchers, nutritionists, artists, and makers based in Lyon. We tackle deep subjects with both rigorous curiosity and a healthy dose of creative irony. We love going on tangents, collaging ideas, and building weird and wonderful things.

Our work is a vibrant collision of disciplines. We collaborate with artists, musicians, researchers in psychology, behaviour sciences, sustainability professionals, festivals, and universities to create installations, immersive experiences, and thought-provoking projects.

What we’re working on now (and where you come in):

This spring and summer, we have a thrilling and eclectic mix of projects on the horizon. Our work ranges from the wonderfully specific to the wildly ambitious:

  • “Dears, we have one week to develop a 15-minute immersive experience for professionals in cultural sector, grounded in our latest research.”
  • “Great news – we’re invited to present our installation at a festival! Now, we just need to fill a hole in the budget over the next few months…”
  • “Hmm, these pre- and post-experience comparisons are off. Looks like we need to check for baseline climate anxiety and build some non-linear models…”

Sound like a “go somewhere you don’t know, and bring back something you don’t know what”? We promise it’s not quite like that! It’s more like… organized chaos with a purpose.

This is where you come in. We are looking for a self-motivated and curious intern who:

  • Is excited to dive into the unknown and share their own ideas.
  • Wants to learn in an environment that will challenge and support their growth.
  • Isn’t afraid of a little ambiguity and enjoys figuring things out as a team.

Yes, our work can be unexpected, and we take things day by day. But we are the good kind of crazy. We build on each other’s strengths, and we offer guidance and structure to help you navigate our peculiar world. We are as logical and rigorous as we are playful. You won’t be alone in the deep end; we’ll be there swimming with you.

The Practical Stuff:

  • Start Date: Yesterday? Seriously, we mean ASAP.
  • Location: Lyon, France (French-speaking is essential and English is needed for our day-to-day collaboration).
  • The Vibe: Passionate, unconventional, slightly odd (in the best way), and always, always curious.

If this sounds like a fun and fascinating opportunity, drop us a line! 

Tell us what makes you curious.

hello [at] creativetimelab [dot] org

More details:  

The Short Version
Help us wrangle the cosmos. Support Creative Time Lab through project coordination, finding cool people to partner with, and helping us figure out what we’re offering to the world.

What You’ll Actually Be Doing
We’re in a phase of growing from brilliant, chaotic experiments into something a little more… structured. (Don’t worry, we’ll keep the good chaos). You’ll be our partner in crime, helping us build the ship while we sail it.

Your main missions, should you choose to accept them:

  • Project Wrangling: Help coordinate workshops, pilot projects, and research events. Keep the trains running on time (even if they’re magical, philosophical trains).
  • Figuring Out What We Sell: Help us articulate our service offerings. What is a participatory workshop on the nature of time worth? Let’s figure it out together. This includes our immersive installations and training formats.
  • Spy Work (aka Market Research): Scope out the landscape. Where does Creative Time Lab fit in the world of culture, research, and innovation? Who’s doing cool stuff, and where are the gaps we can fill?
  • Finding Our People (Partners): Help us identify and map potential soulmates—universities, cultural institutions, municipalities, foundations, and other wonderfully weird organisations who should know about us.
  • Treasure Hunting (Funding): Dive into the world of foundations and public funding programs to find opportunities that align with our mission.
  • Telling Our Story: Help prepare project proposals and outreach materials. Translate what we do into a language that institutions (and their grant committees) can understand and love.
  • Getting Our Ducks in a Row: Help structure our internal resources — documentation, project tracking, shared digital spaces. Basically, help us be less messy.
  • Proving We Exist (Impact Reports): Assist in preparing impact reports and project documentation. Organizing research data, contributing to data analyses (quantitative and qualitative), writing summaries, co-designing impact measurement strategies … you know, the stuff that shows we’re not just making it all up.
  • Event Support: Help before, during, and after the conferences, workshops, and events we (inevitably) end up organising.

Some of the Skills You’ll Proudly Use and Grow:

  • The Professional: Project coordination, ecosystem analysis, partnership mapping, grant research, proposal writing, impact documentation, and the dark art of organisational development.
  • The Analytical: Figuring out where a weird organization fits in a not-so-weird world. Structuring chaos into coherent plans. Turning deep research into things people can actually do.
  • The Human: Radical autonomy and initiative. Communicating with artists, academics, and bureaucrats (sometimes on the same day). Collaborating in a tiny, intense team. Adapting when a project suddenly pivots (because it will).

Why Bother? (The Big Picture)
This isn’t just about fetching coffee and filing papers. This is a hands-on, deep-dive into what it takes to build a mission-driven organisation from the ground up. You’ll get your hands dirty in everything from strategy to logistics, helping us transition from a series of brilliant pilot projects into something more… sustainable and scalable. You’ll leave with a real sense of how to make a cultural and research-oriented project actually work.

What You’ll Take With You (Learning Outcomes)

  • Experience building an emerging org at the intersection of research, culture, and innovation.
  • Real-world skills in market analysis, partnership development, and funding strategy.
  • A hand in designing actual service offerings based on real research.
  • The know-how to document impact and tell a compelling project story.
  • A toolbox full of project coordination and strategic analysis skills, tested in the wild.

The Nitty Gritty

  • Where: Lyon, France. We’ll be on-site for meetings and events, but flexible for remote work when it makes sense.
  • When: ASAP.
  • Hours: Part-time or full-time for 4-5 months. Heads-up: when we’re at festivals or running workshops, that might occasionally include a Sunday or public holiday. It’s the price of doing fun stuff.
  • Cha-ching: Compensation as per French legal internship regulations.
  • Perks: If we ship you off to a festival, we’ve got your transport, accommodation, and meals covered.

🔍 Early Insights: What Does “Futurization” Mean to Us?

Back in 2017–2018, when the Futurization of Thinking and Behaviour project was just beginning, we conducted our first pilot study to understand how people perceive the very word “futurization.”

What does it make you think of? How does it make you feel? What colors or images come to mind?

Our small survey and the first focus-group revealed some fascinating impressions:

💡 Futurization was often linked to technology, innovation, robots, and automation — a kind of ultra-modern world shaped by human design.

🎨 The colors people associated with the future were cold and metallic — white, chrome, silver, steel grey — with only rare traces of green or blue, and almost no warm tones.

🦸‍♂️ When asked to imagine a “character” of futurization, participants named robots, superheroes, and tech icons — mostly male, mostly artificial.

Emotionally, the future felt mixed:
✨ Curiosity (70%) and optimism were paired with uneasiness (60%), hope (50%) with strangeness (40%), and even fear (30%).

These early findings already hinted at something essential:
our collective imagination of the future was technological but emotionally distant — bright and shiny, yet disconnected from nature, humanity, and warmth.

That’s where our work began: to reconnect imagination, emotion, and meaning in how we think about the future.

🌱 The Futurization Project has grown immensely since then — but this first glimpse remains a powerful reminder of why we need to reimagine what the future feels like.

👉 Follow Creative Time Lab to explore how our relationship with the future continues to evolve — through research, art, and collective imagination.

🌱 Creative Time Lab at Department of Economics (BYC) CHRIST (Deemed to be University) Yeshwanthpur : Does the Future Exist?

Creative Time Lab was delighted to present our work last week in Bangalore, India, where our co-founder Dr. Anna Sircova led an engaging session on how people imagine their personal and global futures — and how these visions shape emotions, agency, and collective action.

A central moment of the workshop came from the collective reflection on a scenario that questioned whether the future exists at all. This prompted strikingly diverse emotional and cultural responses:

  • Some observed that even contemplating a “non-existent future” can generate anxiety — especially in cultures where future-thinking is tied to meaning, productivity, and purpose.
  • Others, drawing from more cyclical or spiritual worldviews, expressed that the future is neither guaranteed nor necessary as a psychological anchor; what matters is the continuity of the “microcosm” — our actions, values, and their ripple effects.
  • Several participants noted that uncertainty is universal, but a hopeful or optimistic stance is what allows life to remain meaningful in the present.
  • One student connected the discussion to childhood intuitions — the sense that life itself could be a dream — emphasizing that despite uncertainty, hope remains a stabilizing force.

These reflections beautifully illustrated how cultural models of time (linear, circular, or layered) shape not just how people imagine the future, but how they emotionally inhabit it.

Moreover, during the session, we explored the contrasting perceptions of personal futures (often optimistic and goal-oriented) versus global futures (frequently marked by anxiety and urgency), supported by findings from our international research. We also presented our interactive, sensory-based installation, The Space of Futurization —made possible by the generous support of the Fondation APRIL —which aims to transform abstract future-related anxiety into tangible hope and reflective agency.

We were warmly hosted by Joby Thomas, PhD, Dean, and Dr. Jayesh M P, and had the pleasure of meeting the motivated students from the Nudge Club), whose curiosity and behavioural-science lens enriched the discussion.

Thank you to every participant for your openness, insights, and visionary contributions. Together, we are learning to navigate and nurture the possible futures.

🌱 Creative Time Lab at Ashoka University: Multiple Futures & Radical Hope

This week, Creative Time Lab had the pleasure of sharing our work at Ashoka University, India, where our co-founder Dr. Anna Sircova was invited to present by Prof. Nandini Chatterjee Singh.

Anna introduced students, faculty, and other curious minds to our ongoing research on how people imagine their personal and global futures — and why these perceptions matter for agency, well-being, and collective action.

Drawing on the insights from Denmark, the United States, China, and India — along with recent findings from our immersive installation “The Space of Futurization,” created in France with support of the Fondation APRIL — the presentation sparked a rich dialogue about imagination, time, culture, and emotion.

Across contexts, we continue to observe a striking pattern:
🔹 People perceive their personal future as brighter, more controllable, and full of possibility
🔹 The global future, however, is often seen as dark, uncertain, and even threatening

At Ashoka, this led to thoughtful reflections on cultural concepts of time (linear vs. circular), the influence of “ready-made images” on future thinking, and the growing emotional burden carried by younger generations. The conversation also ventured into music and the design of spaces where people can safely process emotions about the future.

We were especially excited to discuss how The Space of Futurization functions as a living lab — a participatory environment where people express future-related feelings, co-create meaning, and often rediscover hope through shared experience. Several participants at Ashoka wondered if a permanent campus installation could be possible — an idea we would love to explore further.

A warm thank you to Prof. Nandini Chatterjee Singh for hosting us and fostering such a generative exchange. The curiosity and openness of the Ashoka community left us inspired — and more committed than ever to creating spaces where imagination, dialogue, and radical hope can flourish.

Why Creative Time Lab?

The name grew out of a long journey.

Back in 2015 I founded Creative Time Studio — a space where psychology of time met creativity. It was a small experiment born from an idea: that how we use and experience time deeply shapes our lives, our joy, and our ability to change.

The Studio was about saying “yes” to making and creating time — to using creativity as a resource, to shaping moments for discovery, play, and meaning. It was also about my own search: how to bring together years of research on time perspective and my passion for cross-disciplinary approaches with my love for the arts, storytelling, imagination and other creative endeavours.

Over time, this search expanded. I realized that what we needed next was not only a ‘studio’ — a place to create — but also a ‘lab’ — a place to explore, test, and collaborate.

And so, Creative Time Lab was born.

Here, we bring art and science together to create safe spaces where people can reconnect with imagination, curiosity, and a sense of the future. Our flagship project, The Space of Futurization, grew from our research discoveries that there are multiple futures and hope to create conditions for meaningful actions to emerge, to transform future-related anxiety into collective imagination and agency.

In a way, Creative Time Lab continues what the Studio started: a dream space for experimenting with time, creativity, and human connection. It’s a space for joy, reflection, collective imagination and shared meaning.

— Dr. Anna Sircova
Founder, Creative Time Lab

Creative Time Lab: Shaping Tomorrow’s Resilience

We are a France-based non-profit association dedicated to exploring how our relationship with time — and especially the future — shapes mental health, creativity, and social transformation.

At Creative Time Lab, we are searching for ways to help people look into the future without the freezing anxiety. By merging science and art, we create spaces for dialogue, emotional resilience, and collective imagination — because the future begins in how we think, feel, and act right now.

Our flagship project, The Space of Futurization, is an immersive installation that transforms psychological research into shared, sensory experiences. It invites participants to explore their hopes and fears about the future, fostering reflection, connection, and agency.

Follow us to discover how psychology, art, and design can come together to shape a more resilient and imaginative relationship with the future.