• Media type: Book; Still Image
  • Title: Let's become fungal! : mycelium teachings and the arts : based on conversations with indigenous wisdom keepers, artists, curators, feminists, and mycologists
  • Contributor: Ostendorf-Rodríguez, Yasmine [VerfasserIn]; González, Rommy [IllustratorIn]
  • imprint: Amsterdam: Valiz, 2023
  • Extent: 336 Seiten; Illustrationen
  • Language: English
  • ISBN: 9789493246287; 9493246280
  • RVK notation: LH 65020 : Gesamtdarstellungen mit Beschränkung auf ein bestimmtes Thema (z.B. Figurdarstellung, soweit verschiedene Kunstgattungen übergreifend)
    LC 18000 : Darstellung ohne geografischen Bezug
  • Keywords: Kunst > Pilze > Mykologie > Künstlerische Forschung
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: Yasmine Ostendorf-Rodríguez works as curator and researcher on art and ecology, and is based in Mexico-City. She founded and directed many international initiatives at the intersection of art and ecology, including the Green Art Lab Alliance (Asia, Latin America and Europe) and the Nature Research Department, the Van Eyck Food Lab, and the Future Materials Bank at the Jan van Eyck Academie (Netherlands).00There is a growing interest in fungi and mycelium as a material, the ever-branching connecting threads of the fungal world. The entanglements and how this rhizomatic network functions is not just a fascinating ecological system and material, but carries a profound usefulness as a metaphor for our potential new systems, ways of thinking and behaviors.00Let?s Become Fungal! takes its inspiration from the world of art and mycology and shares innovative practices from Latin America and the Caribbean that are rooted in multispecies collaboration, symbiosis, alliances, non-monetary resource exchange, decentralization, bottom-up methods and mutual dependencyƯ?all in line with the behavior of the mycelium.00Every chapter is phrased as a question. They do not lead to answers, but to twelve teachings addressing for instance collaboration, decoloniality, non-linearity, toxicity, mobilization, biomimicry, death, and being non-binary. Simultaneously it ventures deeper into the world of fungi. The teachings from the fungus may inspire artists, collectives, organizations, educators, policy-makers, designers, scientists, anthropologists, change-makers, curators, urbanists, activists, gardeners, community-leaders, farmers, and many others, to become more fungal in their ways of working and being

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  • Shelf-mark: 2023 8 012684
  • Item ID: 35050448
  • Status: Loanable, place order