information, postgraduate program
Workshops and Companions
The workshops of this block will be ‘gardens’ – and therefore for once of spacial nature. I propose to ask these gardens to be our teachers, to learn from them, to let them put us at work, to ask them to suggest a practice to us, to make them structure our time and our collective research attempts etc. The gardens are the ‘education’ framework and the ‘atelier.’
For this, we need interpreters and people who have tools, figures or behaviours to engage, read and work within the workshops. These interpreters – probably we will call them ‚companions’ – will build a network, a web of knowledge, together with us and amongst themselves. I would like to invite quite some of them to accompany us – sometimes alone sometimes in couples or groups.
For further details watch out for following posts.
postgraduate program, workshop
Kobe Mattihys Workshop 1 :: Zenne Garden
digging
This is an elaborate permaculture garden with many small experiments from water cleaning plants to interspecies labour. Kobe, who will also be one of the dedicated mentors – is working in this garden for 12 years together with a collective of various artists and activists. It is quite a sensitive ecosystem.
Read more..postgraduate program, workshop
Vincent P. Alexis Workshop 2 :: Westland / BUITEN/DEHORS
straying
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performative publishing
Salad
Christina Stadlbauer
Une salade, c’est pas comme une tomate
We went on an excursion to Fribourg in Switzerland. I took my little purse where I keep Swiss Francs from my last visit, but noticed that it contained only a few coins. In the train we were speculating how much we would have to pitch in for food and that we should eat rather rice and beans to keep the budget under control. Switzerland is expensive, for Europeans.
The experience at the Unlearning Centre, however, was totally unexpected. We had just arrived, when a car came, with crates of food – freegan. Martin Schick had organized a delivery for us and we found ourselves with more than we could handle. All for free and all (almost) expired.
We tried to fit everything into the two large fridges at the NeighborHub, but did not manage.
Meat, sausages, vegetables, herbs, juices, ice tea, yoghurt and loads of green salad. That first day we got 2 crates of salad – maybe 20 heads of lettuce. Great! Fresh food!
We ate a lot of salad. We ate salad at lunch and for dinner, snacked on it in between. But the salad did not end. Some days later, the car delivered another load to us. There was again salad, new salad. This time, some heads of lettuce, but also some that was already washed and torn into pieces, wrapped in plastic. And some salad hearts, wrapped in plastic film. We were still trying to deal with the 2 crates from the first day. Nicolas made salad soup. We had it warm and iced, with salad on the side. At every meal, there was a salad bowl that could never be finished. One evening, we were high on salad. We could not talk about anything else anymore, could not stop laughing. Mathilde composed a song about salad. “Une salade, c’est pas comme une tomate”.
There was also more meat than we could eat, there were bags and bags of herbs that slowly started to rot in the fridge, there were litres of bottled liquid whole egg and many packkages of rice pudding, different flavours. There was an opening of a new atelier – a big space with machinery – and it was rented for free There was a dinner perfomance at the Belluard festival and the wine bottles kept on being opened and poured into glasses at no extra cost. Generosity came upon us from all sides. It was amazing.
All our lives, we have been hearing about scarcity. At home, we learned how to shut the doors to keep the heat in, we used second hand clothes and we were instructed how to not waste food. At school, we learned the scarcity of natural resources. We all know about the scarcity of money on our bank accounts. But what happened there in Switzerland in June 2019, was abundance. Suddenly, we were confronted with abundance and we had to deal with it. We had to unlearn how we are used to handle scarcity. And this allowed me to observe many interesting things.
I became obsessed. It went automatically. I could not allow myself to throw food away and invented dishes that consumed lots of parsley. I also ate more than I needed, just because I could not see the food being trashed. My attempt was not successful. Lots of stuff that had gotten a second life – saved from the trash of the supermarket could not be saved by us and went on the compost pile.
The Fribourg trip and unlearning for me meant to look into abundance as a concept and the salad became my fulcrum.
postgraduate program, workshop
Marialena Marouda Exercises in Becoming Water
Score for a boat trip
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postgraduate program, workshop
Marialena Marouda, Christina Stadlbauer and Nicolas Geleazzi Writing into becoming water
an instant conversation
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performative publishing, postgraduate program
Mathilde Maillard / I gave a hamac and it came back to me
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postgraduate program, workshop
Peter Stamer / Nicolas Galeazzi The Adoption Project
16-20 March 2013
The Adoption Project takes on the bonds and habits between you and your artistic practice. It challenges the perspectives and positions you engage with in your artistic process and takes them away from your personal involvement by handing them over to a different look, practice, or routine for a certain period of time. A clear defined section of your project shall be packed in a 'box' and given up for adoption, while you will take a section of someone else's research temporally under your 'protection'.Read more..
postgraduate program
Nicolas Galeazzi Block 2019/II Troubled Gardens
29 April-28 July 2019
ecologies of artistic research
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information, postgraduate program
Three Days a Week
29 April-28 July 2019
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performative publishing, postgraduate program
Maurice Meewisse Documentation Fourth Block – troubled garden
1 May-31 July 2019
Curated by Nicolas Y Galeazzi
postgraduate program
Gosie Vervloessem Horror Garden
20-20 May 2019 / Zenne Garden
One way to connect to other then humans is the horror genre. By thinking the unthinkable, we explore the limits of our ability to understand the world. But does the world lends itself to a meaningful relationship? Does increased access lead to decreased strangeness? In thinking about our relationship to the “other than humans”, what is the status of the notion of obscurity and darkness? What lingers at the edges of our experience? The Horror Garden is a tool that explores the idea of our profound dark relation to the World through our relationship with plants.
Read more..postgraduate program, workshop
Ecole Mondiale Bruocsella
22-22 May 2019 / Start at Zenne Garden
a resilient movement for room to secondary river valleies
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postgraduate program, workshop
Martin Schick / construct lab Workshop 3 :: Unlearning Center / Terrestrial Building
24 June-29 April 2019 / Fribourg (CH)
crafting
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postgraduate program, workshop
Marialena Marouda Waterways
1-2 July 2019
postgraduate program, reading session, workshop
Einat Tuchman Traveling through square liberateurs – Molenbeek
12-12 July 2019 / Square des Libérateurs, 1080 Molenbeek-Saint-Jean
Taking a distinctive look at the divergent attitudes towards the environment and the social struggles in these different locations, we will learn about the prototypical difficulties and potentials of such culturally dense urban areas. For this I'm inviting you into my neighbourhood, to discover the "Quartier Liberateurs ".Read more..