Conferentie Future Art Schoolpublicationessaypodcastinterviewvideoblognewsonline coursespeopleAPRIA

Radio ArtEZ


Since 2019, we have our own podcast channel: Radio ArtEZ. The podcast features personal stories and urgent research by ArtEZ students, staff and some of our guests and recordings of Studium Generale events. Listen to Radio ArtEZ here or via your favourite podcast app.

How to Be With Plants?

With Lobke Meekes and Irene Urrutia

podcast
dossier: LAND
How does a plant live and feel? What can we learn from plants? And how can experience, conversations, and art help us explore new ways of understanding and living in connection? In this brand new podcast visual artist and master’s student Education in Arts Lobke Meekes and Mexican/Canadian researcher and curator Irene Urrutia will explore our relationship to plants.

Inspired, want to know more? Then check in at their online workshop on April 22, on worldwide Earth Day.

Small collection of touching, surprising, and inspiring plant artworks

In the podcast How to Be With Plants?, we explored different ways of thinking and experiencing our relationship with vegetal life. Following up on our conversation, we compiled a small collection of touching, surprising, and inspiring plant artworks - including the examples that we referred to in the podcast. Shake your roots and branches, and dig in!


Films
Yaavi (2015) is a documentary film directed by Armando Bautista Guerrero; Dutch/Mixtec filmmaker Itandehui Jansen is director of photography. It was filmed in Oaxaca, Mexico, and features both agave plants and an elderly human couple, Erasmo Bautista and Esperanza García. “When one takes a living being for consumption, one has to ask for permission first. That is the way of the ancestors.” - Imdb. Watch the full film here: vimeo.com/223829085


Treeline: The Secret Life of Trees (2019) is a film by Patagonia Films available in full on YouTube. “Follow a group of skiers, snowboarders, scientists and healers to the birch forests of Japan, the red cedars of British Columbia and the bristlecones of Nevada, as they explore an ancient story written in rings.” - Patagonia Films. Watch the full film here: www.youtube.com/watch?v=YCEaYInJbos (40 min)


Music and audio

Tree Tree (2020) is a song by Nynke Laverman, from her “slowly growing” album titled Plant.
Watch the music video here: youtu.be/jS_2uGBi_N8 (Video by Douwe Dijkstra). We also recommend a podcast by Nynke and Lex Bohlmeijer. Every time she releases a number of her Plant album, the podcast features an interview with someone who inspires her. You can find the episodes in your podcast feed by searching for Nynke Laverman or The Correspondent.


Artworks
Skotopoiesis (meaning “shaped by darkness”) was a 2015 performance by Špela Petrič. It was an exercise in confronting “vegetal otherness”: the artist stood, inmobile, between a source of light and a square of dirt seeded with cress for about 19 hours. Over time, the plants grew shaped by her shadow, while the artists’ body shrunk slightly due to loss of fluids in her intervertebral disks.
Špela Petrič: Skotopoiesis, Photo © Axel Heise, OU /ERT : Phytophilie – Chlorophobie – Savoirs Situés, Emmetrop-Transpalette Bourges, 2019. For more information, visit: www.spelapetric.org/#/scotopoiesis/
Inoculate was a 2013 performance by Ana María Gómez López. The artist successfully germinated a small begonia plant within a silicone punctal plug, placed in her tear duct. As Ana María lay still on a makeshift bed and facing a skylight, the moisture from her body enabled the plant to grow.
Begonia seed grown in a silicone plug placed in the artist’s tear duct. Ana María Gómez López, Innoculate, 2013. For more information, see: manual.vision/
Annegret Kellner
In her Herbarium series, Annegret points at a moral issue with a crushed plant. When (exotic) plants are removed from the ground for research and study, it is acceptable to press and squash them. But if you treat your exotic houseplant in the same way, the result is shocking: it almost looks like domestic violence.

The Vigor series has a more ironic slant. “A rustling houseplant probably looks a bit clumsy,” she says, “but as the viewer experiences the fact that vibrations from an exercise bike are endless when no one intervenes, then the martyrdom of the plant comes into the picture.”
The potted plant has no choice over its whereabouts. At the same time, the plant might actually be stimulating it, making juices flow faster, or roots become thicker for support. Is the contrast or conflict between plants and humans lessened?
Photograph from the Herbarium Serie by Annegret Kellner. Read more about the Herbarium Serie here: annegretkellner.com/herbarium-euphemismus/diepenheim See Vigor here: annegretkellner.com/vigor/vigor-solo
Lobke Meekes
Baarhuisje is Lobke Meekes’ contribution to the art walk ‘Eilandje2021’ at Vogeleiland (‘Bird Island’) in Deventer. The project runs from 15 May to 22 August 2021. Baarhuisje is a storage house for plants. This one person chapel keeps plant particles, behind the transparent window. After a few days, weeks or even months in the Baarhuisje, these pieces of plant, along with all the other greenery, will start a new journey. It’s possible to add your plant element and look at your contribution and all the others until August 22, because then the nutritious and rich soil will be spread on the Bird Island.
events:

Hello Plant! A Terrestrial Workshop

By Irene Urrutia, Mexican-Canadian curator and researcher, and Lobke Meekes, visual artist and master’s student Education in Arts, ArtEZ Zwolle


workshop22 Apr '21

share via:
twitter facebook