Exhibition > The Camille Diaries

The Camille Diaries

New Artistic Positions on M/otherhood, Life and Care

Sonia Levy | Mary Maggic | Naja Ryde Ankarfeldt | Baum & Leahy | Špela Petrič | Margherita Pevere | Ai Hasegawa | Nicole Clouston | Cecilia Jonsson | Tarah Rhoda

Mary Maggic: Milik bersama rekombinan, exhibition view, Art Laboratory Berlin, 2020, photo: Tim Deussen

Špela Petrič: Phytoteratology, 2016, detail of installation, Art Laboratory Berlin, 2020, photo: Tim Deussen

Margherita Pevere: From the series Wombs_W.01, 2018, and Wombs_W03, 2019, Art Laboratory Berlin, 2020, photo: Tim Deussen

Sonia Levy: For the Love of Corals, 2018, video still

Sonia Levy: For the Love of Corals, 2018, video installation, Art Laboratory Berlin, 2020, photo: Tim Deussen

Ankarfeldt, Baum & Leahy: The Red Nature of Mammalga, 2020, Art Laboratory Berlin

The exhibition and the symposium The Camille Diaries. Current Artistic Positions on M/otherhood, Life and Care discuss new artistic works by eleven international women and non-binary artists (installations, video, objects, performance). Reflecting on the current conditions of our world (environmental changes, gender aspects, biopolitics, etc.), the artists’ positions propose an ‘aesthetics of care’ as the basis for inter-species coexistence. Here, the planet is understood as a symbiotic web in which we are all entangled with one another (humans, plants, animals, environment) – on molecular, organic, ethical and biopolitical levels. The artistic positions investigate reproductive mechanisms, biochemical connections between humans and nonhumans, and refer to alternative biomaterials as “source of life” in future times of scarcity and crisis.


The project title “The Camille Diaries” alludes to the “Camille Stories” the final chapter of “Staying with the Trouble” (2016) by philosopher and biologist Donna Haraway, a speculative future where a dwindling human population replaces births with care between species. Each “Camille” cares for the genetic material of an endangered species (the monarch butterfly) by storing parts of that material in their own DNA.

In the exhibition artists explore genetic and biochemical exchange between human and non-human, a both part of and remedy for the Anthropocene. Here the theme of biotechnological transfigurations of human bodies places the human being on the periphery and rather directs our full attention to other living beings. This creates – and this is central to the planned series of events – a basic understanding of other species and organisms from a feminist perspective.

Sonia Levy: For the Love of Corals, 2018, video installation, Art Laboratory Berlin, 2020, photo: Tim Deussen

Sonia Levy: For the Love of Corals, 2018, video installation, Art Laboratory Berlin, 2020, photo: Tim Deussen

Mary Maggic: Milik bersama rekombinan, exhibition view, Art Laboratory Berlin, 2020, photo: Tim Deussen

Mary Maggic: Milik bersama rekombinan, exhibition view, Art Laboratory Berlin, 2020, photo: Tim Deussen

Ankarfeldt, Baum & Leahy: The Red Nature of Mammalga, 2020, Art Laboratory Berlin, photo: Tim Deussen

Špela Petrič: Phytoteratology, 2016, installation view, Art Laboratory Berlin, 2020, photo: Tim Deussen

Špela Petrič: Phytoteratology, 2016, installation view, Art Laboratory Berlin, 2020, photo: Tim Deussen

Špela Petrič: Phytoteratology, 2016, installation view, Art Laboratory Berlin, 2020, photo: Tim Deussen

Ankarfeldt, Baum & Leahy: The Red Nature of Mammalga, 2020, Art Laboratory Berlin, photo: Tim Deussen

Sonia Levy’s 2-channel video installation For the Love of Corals is a cinematic inquiry that focuses on the daily labour of caring for endangered beings to resuscitate them from their imminent human-induced extinction. Mary Maggic’s work milik bersama rekombinan explores the surreal landscape of an urban Indonesian river colonized by plastic, with toxic implications for nearby inhabitants. For their project Mammalga Naja Ankerfeldt and Baum & Leahy find inspiration in the life remediating abilities of the algae as well as ways of m/othering or making kin in algal family patterns. In Špela Petrič’s installation Phytoteratology, thale cress embryos have been grown in a bath of chemicals from the artist’s own body, resulting in a biochemical chimera with the artist as ‘co-mother’.

Margherita Pevere: From the series Wombs_W.01, 2018, and Wombs_W03, 2019, Art Laboratory Berlin, 2020, photo: Tim Deussen

Margherita Pevere: From the series Wombs_W.01, 2018, background/ wall: Ai Hasegawa: I Wanna Deliver a Dolphin…, 2011-13, Art Laboratory Berlin, 2020, photo: Tim Deussen

Ai Hasegawa: I Wanna Deliver a Dolphin…, 2011-13, Art Laboratory Berlin, 2020, photo: Tim Deussen

Nicole Clouston: Mud (Berlin), Art Laboratory Berlin, 2020, photo: Tim Deussen

Left: Nicole Clouston: Mud (Berlin), right: Margherita Pevere: From the series Wombs_W.01, Art Laboratory Berlin, 2020, photo: Tim Deussen

Left: Cecilia Jonsson/ Rodrigo Leite de Oliveira: HAEM, 2016, mixed media installation, right: Tarah Rhoda: Ourglass, Art Laboratory Berlin, 2020, photo: Tim Deussen.

Cecilia Jonsson/ Rodrigo Leite de Oliveira: HAEM, 2016, mixed media installation, Art Laboratory Berlin, 2020, photo: Tim Deussen.

Tarah Rhoda: Ourglass, installation, Art Laboratory Berlin, 2020, photo: Tim Deussen

ALB team members Ayla Warncke and Natacha Lamounier preparing Tarah Rhoda’s work Ourglass, Art Laboratory Berlin, August 2020, photo: Art Laboratory Berlin

ALB team members Ayla Warncke and Natacha Lamounier preparing Tarah Rhoda’s work Ourglass, Art Laboratory Berlin, August 2020, photo: Art Laboratory Berlin

Margherita Pevere’s Wombs features scientific glassware hosting living bacterial colonies producing flesh-like biofilm, growing in a liquid environment infused with the artist’s own hormones, and a photographic series. Ai Hasegawa proposes a transspecies act of motherhood in her work I Wanna Deliver a Dolphin… Nicole Clouston’s artwork Mud (Berlin) takes the form of 12 rectangular, acrylic prisms filled with organisms growing from mud taken from Berlin’s lakes and rivers. In Haem artist Cecilia Jonsson and scientist Rodrigo Leite de Oliveira have created a compass by deriving iron from the blood protein haemoglobin of donated human placentas. Meanwhile Tarah Rhoda’s Ourglass is a tribute to the remarkable alliance between plants and animals through the photosynthesis and respiration.

The one-day symposium will bring the artists together with researchers from the humanities and natural sciences into a critical dialogue. On the basis of the exhibited works, concepts of “Collective survival” and “Arts of noticing” (A. Tsing) as well as “Staying with the Trouble” (D. Haraway) and “Bodies of water” connected to hydrofeminism (A. Neimanis) will be discussed in an interdisciplinary manner.

-Regine Rapp & Christian de Lutz



The project THE CAMILLE DIARIES arose from a generous invitation to take part in the international curatorial swarm for the open call »M/others and Future Humans«, initiated by Ida Bencke (LABAE,Copenhagen, DK) and Eben Kirksey (Princeton’s Institute for Advanced Study, USA).


See complete portfolio of art works and texts here (pdf file)



Press Reviews


Alle Spezies sind gleich in Art-in-Berlin.de by Urszula Usakowska-Wolff (03.09.2020)

Bio-Art au Art Laboratory de Berlin by Irina Moussakova in lmoussakova.wordpress.com (17.09.2020)

A Scientific Motherhood: ‘The Camille Diaries’ at Art Laboratory Berlin in berlinartlink.com by Judith Vallette (Sept. 24, 2020)

Insight: ‘THE CAMILLE DIARIES’, finding kin and ‘m/othering’ life In Clot by Lyndsey Walsh (26 Oct. 2020)

ArtHist.net published on 8 Jan 2021, The Camille Diaries (on the symposium)

VenueS

Art Laboratory Berlin
Prinzenallee 34, 13359 Berlin
OKK
Prinzenallee 29, 13359 Berlin

Dates and opening hours

Opening: 27 August 2020
28 August – 4 October 2020
Thu – Sun, 2-6 pm or by appointment

CURATORS

Regine Rapp & Christian de Lutz

Team

Regine Rapp, Christian de Lutz, Tuçe Erel,
Palooka Frank, Natacha Lamounier Ribeiro,
Sarah Hermanutz, Ayla Warncke

MEDIA PARTNERS

art-in.berlin.de
Aviva-Berlin

Photo Documentation

Tim Deussen

Graphic design / Poster

Eva-Maria Bolz

Cooperation partners

OKK, Berlin
PA58, Berlin
Department of Applied and Molecular Microbiology, TU Berlin

SUPPORTED BY

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