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Ruderal Practices, Jérémie Le Hénaff. Installation.

Ruderal Practices, 2022
Curation: Sam Godfrey & Maria Paula Maldonado
Project Space Festival 2022, Berlin
A day of installations, workshops, and performances at Make-up Project Space, Berlin 

Participating artists:
Jérémie Le Hénaff

Mars Löffler, Frida Zack & Milosch Spielvogel
Thomas Mayer
Marina Resende & Lea Baur
Jakob Wirth

Photography: Dora Jacques Piaszek

Hypersea Carrierbags, Mars Löffler, Frida Zack & Milosch Spielvogel. Performance.

New Design ( 0uq “uield ), Thomas Mayer. Installation.

Project spaces as alternative support structures for emerging artists, Jakob Wirth. Workshop.

The Third Landscape: Retrieving the Commons. Marina Resende & Lea Baur. Workshop.

Curatorial Text

“We take the concept “ruderal”° in order to reflect on our individual, spatial and collective practices.

Ruderal plant species, so-called weeds, are those that spontaneously inhabit small or large disturbed places°° - such as cracks, wastelands or rubble - and adapt quickly to them. In these ecologies, plants respond flexibly to the availability of changing resources, and spontaneously bloom with no predetermined outcome other than their own survival. They form unintended and unruly ecologies, and depending on relationships and situations they can be either noxious or benign, healthy and regenerative. Ruderal plants are often viewed as undesired or unwelcome (though of course any plant could be seen as a ‘bad weed’ if it grows in a place that is not wanted).

It would be easy to use this solely as a metaphor for artists and project spaces in Berlin, but Make-up and its human and non-human inhabitants are very much in an entangled relationship with each other. The building is in disrepair; a ruin-in-waiting that will eventually be knocked down and replaced with something else; weeds that spring up through the cracks and snake through the courtyard; a constellation of people arriving in, and departing from, the space, trying to build a life, an art practice and a community together in a city of ghosts, rubble and travelling seeds°°°.

We view being ruderal as a potential – a way to actively grow inside this chaos, or a way to figure out new connections away from institutions that want you to be less unruly.”

~Sam Godfrey & Maria Paula Maldonado

° ruderal ecologies is a term coined by German ecologists after WWII, and has been used a way to understand and shape understandings of urban spaces and relationships °° especially those disturbed by humans. °°° as a starting point, we read an article by Bettina Stoetzer called ‘Ruderal Ecologies: Rethinking Nature, Migration and the Urban Landscape in Berlin,’ where she talks about how ruderal ecologies, greenwashing, racism and the city collide.