Spora
This May, Swiss Institute launches Spora, a curatorial initiative centered in SI鈥檚 institutional imperative to integrate environmental consciousness and climate action into all facets of the institution. Like spores spreading throughout the physical structure of our building and permeating the immaterial processes of SI, Spora is an experiment that explores what a practice of environmental institutional critique could be.
Unfolding and growing over the course of the next several years, the initial artworks in the project will be on long-term view in the non-gallery spaces of SI. In the stairways, hallways, roof, and other interstitial spaces, artists have contributed to the daily life, maintenance and functioning of the building with artworks that take shape through compost, plants, wall paint, public space and more. These include Jenna Sutela鈥檚 earth battery-powered oracle, Vivian Suter鈥檚 weather-exposed mural, Helen Mirra鈥檚 chance-determined background painting, T鈥檜y鈥檛鈥檛anat-Cease Wyss鈥檚 sonic recordings of mycelium, and Mary Manning鈥檚 photographs merging private and public, natural and urban spaces.
The artworks at the core of Spora are accompanied by the institution鈥檚 initial steps towards climate action, begun in 2022, which take form as a thorough analysis of SI鈥檚 carbon emissions through transport, travel, energy, and other ecological and social factors, and a plan of actions developed with the entire SI team for reducing the institution鈥檚 environmental impact. SI will publish and share this process with the hopes to sprout inspiration and collaboration across institutional boundaries. Spora is conceived as an open-ended approach, which acknowledges that this is a continuous project that will generate more questions than answers. It is an attempt to germinate change while acknowledging context and limitations, with the understanding that this process is imperfect but urgent.
Spora and the accompanying event series, These Seasons, as well as the institutional initiatives of climate action, propose a start to a morphing process of reflection and transformation.
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This May, Swiss Institute launches Spora, a curatorial initiative centered in SI鈥檚 institutional imperative to integrate environmental consciousness and climate action into all facets of the institution. Like spores spreading throughout the physical structure of our building and permeating the immaterial processes of SI, Spora is an experiment that explores what a practice of environmental institutional critique could be.
Unfolding and growing over the course of the next several years, the initial artworks in the project will be on long-term view in the non-gallery spaces of SI. In the stairways, hallways, roof, and other interstitial spaces, artists have contributed to the daily life, maintenance and functioning of the building with artworks that take shape through compost, plants, wall paint, public space and more. These include Jenna Sutela鈥檚 earth battery-powered oracle, Vivian Suter鈥檚 weather-exposed mural, Helen Mirra鈥檚 chance-determined background painting, T鈥檜y鈥檛鈥檛anat-Cease Wyss鈥檚 sonic recordings of mycelium, and Mary Manning鈥檚 photographs merging private and public, natural and urban spaces.
The artworks at the core of Spora are accompanied by the institution鈥檚 initial steps towards climate action, begun in 2022, which take form as a thorough analysis of SI鈥檚 carbon emissions through transport, travel, energy, and other ecological and social factors, and a plan of actions developed with the entire SI team for reducing the institution鈥檚 environmental impact. SI will publish and share this process with the hopes to sprout inspiration and collaboration across institutional boundaries. Spora is conceived as an open-ended approach, which acknowledges that this is a continuous project that will generate more questions than answers. It is an attempt to germinate change while acknowledging context and limitations, with the understanding that this process is imperfect but urgent.
Spora and the accompanying event series, These Seasons, as well as the institutional initiatives of climate action, propose a start to a morphing process of reflection and transformation.
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The artworks in Spora, unfolding over three years at the Swiss Institute, linger in the mind, its interconnections multiplying like spores.