“Pond of water-lilies“, 2004
“Tomorrow is today“, 2006 – A film from the date line in Fiji at Taveuni Island. The video show two parallel projections, one from each side of the date line. Projects by Nikolaj Recke.
“Pond of water-lilies“, 2004
“Tomorrow is today“, 2006 – A film from the date line in Fiji at Taveuni Island. The video show two parallel projections, one from each side of the date line. Projects by Nikolaj Recke.
“BG”, 2007 (set of keys necessary to get access into every room of the building),
“Coppice”, 2007 (various plants causing a detour within the building) by Mandla Reuter.
»edible urban party jungle«, 2008 by Namaiki using permaculture principles to create gardens focusing on edible perennials and trees (both useful and support species) in a compact food forest garden type system at the Jogja National Museum in Indonesia.
»Revival Field«, 1990-1993. On eighteen square meters of ground in Pig’s Eye landfill in St. Paul, Minnesota, contaminated with cadmium and isolated by metal barriers, Mel Chin made a smaller circle divided into six zones comprising of various species of decontaminating plants (absorbing heavy metals such as zinc and the cadmium). Plantings lasted until the site was detoxified.
Documentation of Namaiki’s Kinky Muff Land (2007), an exhibition on gardening and agriculture in the city.
“Eternal Solar Corn”, “Airbag Growbag”, “Weather Chair – Solar Dawn”,
“Water Phantom 4″ (string bikinis, sand, gravel, coal, water bottle) and “Ascension Filter (Donau)” (trousers, blazer, chemise, ties, sand, gravel, coal, water dispenser) by Mark Hosking.
»10 yards of…« is a series of small gardens and forests placed in recycled refuse dumpsters. »10 yards« refers to the payload capacity of each dumpster. Once constructed, these gardens can be installed with relative ease in any urban location; just as easily, they can be picked up by truck and moved to a new location. By Michael Bernstein.
Life Support Systems – Vanda is an attempt to analyze electrical signals from the vanda hybrida orchid, and apply language modeling techniques to these signals in a computer. The result is a virtual model, which continues to generate similar signals long after the original orchids are gone – a kind of computerized longevity. Mateusz Herczka