The Dartington Hall Trust / Events / Thu 07 May 2015
Exhibition Opening - En necromasse
An optimistic, fungal perspective on death and production
from 5-7pm
Free, please email lara.lloyd@dartington.org to book your place
Soil is a material on which the whole of civilzation depends. Along with clean air and fresh water, it is one of the fundamental components that support life on this planet.
In today’s world soils are endangered due to increased neglect, leading them to become more contaminated and eroded - with surveys showing that 38% of soils in the South West England are substantially degraded. Looking deeper into the issue of value creation by recycling materials from the Dartington estate, artist-in-residence Debra Solomon examines the value of nature’s work in the rhizosphere - a narrow region of soil directly influenced by root secretions and soil microorganisms. In doing so, she proposes an alternative ecology, valuing the importance of soil compared to current mainstream agricultural practice. Alongside Debra’s work there will feature a video piece by Zoe Young, which documents the other residencies that have taken place so far.
Debra is an Amsterdam-based artist and the founder of the Urbaniahoeve Social Design Lab for Urban Agriculture. Her work involves the development of edible landscapes in city areas and producing fertile soils from urban waste in the Netherlands, and she will be giving a small talk at the exhibition launch on Thursday 7 May.
For more information visit http://www.dartington.org/spektrix/event?Id=110398
Event Location
Dartington Gallery
next to the Visitor Centre
Dartingon Hall
Totnes
TQ9 6EL
Email: lara.lloyd@dartington.org
Website: http://www.dartington.org/spektrix/event?Id=110398