Our Living Soil
About our relationship with soil
Exhibition by zone2source


Graphic design by Olga Ganzha.

Introduction

Through the website www.museumofedible.earth our audience was invited to give feedback on their earth tasting experience. In 2020–2022 we received more than 600 comments describing tastes, flavours and associations reflecting on more than 140 earth samples. Statistics were collected accordingly. It is thus a participatory and a constantly evolving work.

Printed catalogue of 41 pages of the samples of MEE has been produced, where a special attention on top of each page is given to the tastes of earth, along with the samples photos, background stories, and references.


Photo by masharu, 2022. Graphic design by Olga Ganzha.

During the Shadow Floriade, Zone2Source will participate in Our Living Soil’s international programme. The two-year art-science project is supported by the World Congress of Soil Science that will take place this year between 31 July and 5 August in Glasgow. The aim of the congress and Our Living Soil is “to inspire a deeper public understanding of the importance of soils.”

From July 10 to September 18 the group exhibition Our Living Soil at Zone2Source presents artists who, in different ways, are concerned with soil and land. During this period, the artists will gradually develop new projects for the programme, some building on their residency last year at the World Soil Museum in Wageningen. Kate Foster, who lives in both the Netherlands and Scotland, will physically attend the Congress of World Soil Science and shape her artistic responses and observations into ongoing work for the exhibition.


photo by Thomas Lenden, 2022.

The Importance of Soil
In our capitalist society, soil is seen as one of the many natural resources that can be used. But soil is much more than that; it is something alive and nourishing. Furthermore, healthy soil is essential for all life on earth, including our human life. We need a rediscovery with new stories to understand and experience our relationship to soil. While science takes a narrow, specialist view of soil research, art plays a vital role in representing and shaping new practices and portraying the many diverse cultural relationships people can have with soil. By asking different questions, artists can establish connections from a different perspective in which we evidently experience entanglement – the coexistence of people and soil.

Our Living Soil is a research project into cultural meanings, representations and values of the soil in a time of planetary change. People are intimately connected with the earth, but modern man generally has little understanding of the meaning of soil in our lives. Around the globe, soils are increasingly threatened by various procedures. Examples of these threats are intensive soil management and monocultures, and short-termism. All resulting in compaction, pollution, erosion and salinisation, loss of fertility, organic matter and biodiversity. The health of our soils is rarely brought up to the public compared to the health of our air, rivers and oceans, climate disruption and the conservation of endangered species.


photo by Thomas Lenden, 2022.

However, soil health, climate change, food production, biodiversity and water supply are all inextricably linked. The latest State of Nature report suggests that poor agricultural management appears to significantly impact nature. Recently, it has been found that peatland is one of the most essential soils for CO2 storage in the fight against global warming. And so, the historical abuse of peatlands in the Netherlands and Scotland has been recognised in large-scale peatland restoration.


photo by masharu, 2022.

For the exhibition Our Living Soil, we have invited artists who are doing research on the soil in all kinds of ways. We investigate the role of artists in landscape research, how they do research and what forms of publicity they develop to make the meaning of ecosystems tangible and shed new light on them. Artists conducting fieldwork in landscapes, often in transdisciplinary teams, have developed as a genre of artistic practice. During Our Living Soil, we will reflect on the meaning of art as fieldwork together with the artists and the audience through debate, workshops and expeditions: how do we present work that deals with a landscape in the art space, what forms of publicity can we develop that maintain the connection with the location and the process of research? Our Living Soil consists of an exhibition with projects inside and outside the pavilion and an extensive public programme of debates, workshops and expeditions.

by masharu, De Onkruidenier, Debra Solomon, Jasper Coppes & Esmee Geerken, Jacqueline Heerema, Miek Zwamborn & Rutger Emmelkamp.