Frontiers and entangled ecologies
Edge Effects in seoul
This essay was published in connection with the group exhibition Edge Effects: Active Earth at Art Sonje Center, Seoul.
Art Sonje Project #7 / 2017: HIAP & Frontiers in Retreat
November 7 – December 3, 2017
Artists:
Elena Mazzi & Sara Tirelli (Italy)
mirko nikolic (Serbia / UK / Sweden)
nabbteeri (formerly: Nabb+Teeri) (Finland)
Tuomas A. Laitinen (Finland)
Jaakko Pallasvuo (Finland)
Frontiers and Entangled Ecologies
‘Ecology’ is about perspective, really. There is no such thing as ‘nature’ or ‘environment’ distinct from human life.
Instead, we are part of entangled processes and ecosystems: quantum, biological, affective, social, political, economic, and technological – among countless others.
While imagining future biomes, bodies, and ways of being, the artists in the Edge Effects: Active Earth exhibition tackled these enmeshed ecologies through syntheses of different materials, methods, and philosophical registers. While doing so, they dissolved the notion of ecological questions as something separate from humans’ everyday existence.
Complex, subtle, and often obscured codependencies between humans and other life forms were the focus of the Seoul chapter of the exhibition series Edge Effects. The conceptual key to the exhibition, reflected in the setup of the exhibition space, was ‘entanglement’ – ever-changing, knotty relations between all forms of matter. What emerges is a porous, living exhibition-as-an-ecosystem.
At present, human lives are still mostly earth-bound, despite the persistent fantasies of transforming humans into interplanetary dwellers. Techno-fixated fantasies are often built on hopes of escaping the boundaries of our bodies and planet. Dreams of thriving space colonies fuel utopian ideas of infinite growth and expansion to ever new frontiers. Counterproductively, they allow people not to learn how to keep on living on Earth. Concepts such as ‘virtual’ and ‘immaterial’ are integral to these fantasies, and they blur the fact that even the most sophisticated technologies are based on materialities and physical conditions of our solar system. In this sense, these technologies are not opposed to ‘nature’.
As they challenge the outdated idea of nature and culture as binary opposites, the artists in the exhibition utilise diffractive and anti-representational approaches, in a Baradian sense of the terms [1]. Rather than reinforcing the imaginary divide (between nature and culture) by romanticising and creating new representations of so called nature, their artworks make palpable the subtle connections that form all life on Earth. This is not an intellectual or aesthetic project that aims to erase vital differences, on the contrary – becoming better at recognising differences, learning how to live with them and celebrate them, is of key importance in contemporary ecological thought.
Humans have evolved with technologies based on specific materialities and inter- species relationships. Therefore, so-called environmental questions have to be considered in connection with the technological, economic, political, and other aspects of human existence.
All this said, in this exhibition humans are definitely not in the limelight. Ecological perspective is born from the recognition of the infinite and intimate ways in which our lives are interwoven with non-human life forms, such as with microbes, plants and mushrooms. Life on Earth is all about sympoiesis (making-with) rather than autopoiesis (self-organising individuals or systems with clear boundaries). [2] ‘The arts of living on a damaged planet’ call for better informed understandings on how things work together, how everything is entangled, and how we might develop abilities to respond to the world we inhabit.
[1] Karen Barad (2007) Meeting the universe Halfway. Quantum Physics and the Entanglement of Matter and Meaning. Duke University Press. Pp. 89.
[2] Donna Haraway (2017): ‘Symbiogenesis, Sympoiesis, and Art Science Activisms for Staying With the Trouble’. In: Anna Tsing; Heather Swanson; Elaine Gan; Nils Bubandt (Eds.) (2017) ‘Arts of Living on a Damaged Planet’, University of Minnesota Press. Pp. m25–m50.