Exhibition

Oikos Logos

30 Nov 2018

Event times

6-9pm

Cost of entry

Free

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Enclave Lab

London
England, United Kingdom

Address

Travel Information

  • Deptford Bridge Railway station
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About

The term ecology derives itself from the Greek words Oikos (household) and Logos (study), translating as ‘the study of the household’. Oikos Logos has activated Enclave Lab as a festivalistic laboratory departing from the traditional static exhibition structure and instead favouring real-time testing of theory with practice in a residency environment. The festivalistic Laboratory, as a curatorial methodology, is alternative to spectacle by encouraging participation and play to create edutainment value whilst promoting non-violence towards all living things through self-management, coexistence and co- survival. Split into two parts, Enclave Lab has first become a laboratory, in which the artists have taken residence for the past 3 weeks, and secondly an exhibition space where there aren’t singular works, but instead a mapping of an idea.

Jacob Von Uexküll, the father of modern zoology, proposed the term umwelt to describe his findings of closed worlds overlaid on the Earth. His dehumanization of nature combined with the studying of what Anna Tsing would call ‘polyphonic assemblages’ in an ecological community of multi-specie worlds, birthed a radical reconfiguring of Darwinian hierarchies that were then thought to be the natural order. Tsing and Donna Haraway, have furthered Uexküll’s thinking to try and form an ecological post- anthropocentric position that has roots within the arts, politics and the social, considering the term Anthropocene as inadequate when addressing the Earth as a shared space of all organisms. Anna Tsing, an American anthropologist, questions in her book The Mushroom at the End of the World: On the Possibility of Life in Capitalist Ruins (2015) at what point does a ‘gathering become a happening’ when species act upon each other drawing “one world making project into the other”. We are aware that multispecies alliances already occur without humans in the symbiosis of the Earth and we are now learning how to be included in this, sewing together our stories to the Earths. Another of Tsing’s notions is that of a ‘contamination as collaboration’. Can human contamination of the Earth’s environments, ecologies and creatures evolve into some form of collaboration? How does the non-human interact with other others? How do we articulate and narrate the nonhuman ‘other,’ through what language, and in what setting?

Human influenced ecologies can create new environmental networks by mutualisticly transferring material; we provide technological assistance to coral growth so they can reproduce faster to combat human caused coral bleaching, providing a life source for many of the oceans creatures. We could think of humans as becoming a fluid component of the Earth’s mesh, even if we aren’t necessary to its survival; we are a node, a paranode and a communication link. The strange stranger, which Timothy Morton suggests is an uncanny ‘arrivant’ in a space where no one is sure who is who or what is what highlights the interconnectedness of this mesh. It is a blended ecotone, where two ecologies meet and all life forms act upon each other, rendering it difficult to distinguish one from another. The mesh, Morton suggests, is a more suitable word to describe natural networks as they are beyond concept as something that can be both the holes in a network and the threading between them.

CuratorsToggle

William Noel Clarke

Exhibiting artistsToggle

Hannah Rowan

Matthew Verdon

Gregory Herbert

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