Course detail
Plant, animal, mineral: plants and other natural entities in contemporary art
FaVU-1PAMAcad. year: 2022/2023
Students will reflect working with biological material in visual art in theoretical texts and their own artistic practice. The course will provide lectures on aesthetic, etic, and philosophical perception of nature, ecosystems, and landscape and its formation by human activities; we will look at different concepts of wildness and wilderness, at different approaches understanding urban wilderness, community allotment gardening, and to appreciating plants and other non-human entities through the prism of contemporary posthumanist philosophy as it is reflected in contemporary art. Students will be able to consult their work with specialists from The Silva Tarouca Research Institute for Landscape and Ornamental Gardening (vegetation ecology, landscape infrastructure), or with practicing professionals (ornamental gardening). Students’ practical outcome of this course - a materialized or carefully planned artwork – will be the result of these theoretical and practical intersections.
Language of instruction
Number of ECTS credits
Mode of study
Guarantor
Learning outcomes of the course unit
The goal is to inspire students to create a work of art that we can present in a group exhibition, but the realization of which will not coincide with the course (it will be carried out later and is therefore not tied to the completion of the course credits).
Prerequisites
Co-requisites
Planned learning activities and teaching methods
Assesment methods and criteria linked to learning outcomes
Course curriculum
1. Lecture 1. Appreciating nature and wilderness through the perspective of historical aesthetic values (English philosophy and aesthetics of the 18th century, the theory of the picturesque in perceiving landscape, the conceptions of historical parks and gardens; wilderness, the sublime, and nature through romanticizing (and colonizing) optics; landscape – an artificial human product (can we still perceive wildness though it?); wildness vs. wilderness; landscape as human artifact AND as a complex of functional ecosystems (examples of pre-industrial landscapes in South Moravia). Urban wilderness and vague terrain. Stibral, Cronon, Kolejka, Jongepierová, Hédl, Haluzík.
2. Lecture 2. Botanical explorations in the city, allotment gardening (historical perspectives, contemporary political perspectives), the aesthetics of small private gardens and allotment gardens, the battle of different aesthetic modes in public space, botanical and biodiversity values in urban space. Sádlo, Pokorný, Šturma, Gibas, Kolářová, Jedlička.
3. Lecture 3. Cultivating ornamental plants as an aesthetical phenomenon. Fad? Kitch? Nostalgia? Memory? History of changes. Copyright. Naming cultivars as a reflection of cultural stereotypes. Georg Gessert, Noel Kingsbury, Ondřej Fous, Jack Goody.
4. Lecture 4. Posthumanist philosophy focusing on plants. What we know about plant life, plant consciousness, and how this knowledge can form our perception both of plants and the world around us. Examples of artistic practices. Giovanni Aloi, Stefano Mancuso, Michael Marder, Monica Gagliano.
5. First practical workshop. Students will introduce their first ideas about their artistic projects.
6. Effects Seminar. Prudence Gibson: The Plant Contract/Monica Gagliano, ed. Thus Spoke The Plant. Discussion and analysis of selected chapters.
7. Seminar. Giovanni Aloi – The Antennae Journal – discussion of a selected text.
8. Field trip 1
9. Second workshop. Discussion of artworks in process (with possible external tutors). Students will be expected to reflect in the discussion the theoretical knowledge gained in the lectures and seminars.
10. Field trip 2.
11. Third workshop. Final presentations of the project, including a written statement (900 words), discussion of a possible exhibition format (where? What kind of strategy? Financing?)
11. Third workshop. Final presentations of the project, including a written statement (900 words), discussion of a possible exhibition format (where? What kind of strategy
Work placements
Aims
Specification of controlled education, way of implementation and compensation for absences
Recommended optional programme components
Prerequisites and corequisites
Basic literature
Aloi, Giovanni. Botanical Speculations: Plants in Contemporary Art.
Aloi, Giovanni. Why Look at Plants? The Botanical Emergence in Contemporary Art. Series:Critical Plant Studies, Volume: 5
Cronon, William. The Trouble With Wilderness.
Fanta Josef, Macková Jana, Petřík Petr (eds): Krajina a lidé, Academia 2017.
Gessert, Georg. Green Light: Toward an Art of Evolution.
Gibas, Petr. 2018. „Zahrádkové osady jako prostor soukromý, veřejný, nebo jiný? O neoliberalizaci správy městského prostoru.“ Pp. 123-135, Petr Kratochvíl (ed.). Veřejný prostor v ohrožení? Aktuální problémy městského veřejného prostoru z pohledu společenskovědních disciplín. Praha: Artefactum. Artefactum. ISBN 978-80-88283-18-8.
Gibas, Petr. 2019. „Rytmy budování a péče / Geografie ‚zahrádkářů a zahrádkářek.“ Pp. 251-274, Lucie Pospíšilová, Robert Osman (Eds.). Geografie „okrajem“: každodenní časoprostorové zkušenosti. Praha: Karolinum. ISBN 978-80-2464-255-0.
Gibson, Prudence: The Plant Contract . Art’s Return to Vegetal Life
Hédl, Radim. Les je to, co roste samo (Vesmír).
Kingsbury, Noel. Garden Flora: The Natural and Cultural History of the Plants In Your Garden
Kingsbury, Noel. Hybrid. The History and Science of Plant Breeding.
Kolejka, Jaromír a kol. Předindustriální krajina Moravy. Brno: Soliton, 2020.
Pokorný Petr a Štorch, David, eds. Antropocén. Praha: Academia, 2020.
Stibral, Karel a kol. Zahrada. Přirozenost a umělost (Krása, krajina, příroda IV). Praha: Dokořán, 2012.
Stibral, Karel. Bio art. Živé organismy a biologie v umění. Sešity pro umění, teorii a příbuzné zóny. 10/2011.
Stibral, Karel. Estetika přírody: k historii estetického ocenění krajiny.
Stibral, Karel. Krajina, maska přírody.
Stibral, Karel. O malebnu. Estetika přírody mezi zahradou a divočinou. Praha: Dokořán; Brno: Masarykova univerzita, 2011.
Recommended reading
Classification of course in study plans
- Programme VUM Master's
branch VU-IDT , 1 year of study, summer semester, elective
branch VU-IDT , 2 year of study, summer semester, elective
branch VU-IDT , 1 year of study, summer semester, elective
branch VU-IDT , 2 year of study, summer semester, elective
branch VU-D , 1 year of study, summer semester, elective
branch VU-D , 2 year of study, summer semester, elective
branch VU-D , 1 year of study, summer semester, elective
branch VU-D , 2 year of study, summer semester, elective
branch VU-VT , 1 year of study, summer semester, elective
branch VU-VT , 2 year of study, summer semester, elective
branch VU-VT , 1 year of study, summer semester, elective
branch VU-VT , 2 year of study, summer semester, elective
branch VU-D , 1 year of study, summer semester, elective
branch VU-D , 2 year of study, summer semester, elective
branch VU-IDT , 1 year of study, summer semester, elective
branch VU-IDT , 2 year of study, summer semester, elective
branch VU-VT , 1 year of study, summer semester, elective
branch VU-VT , 2 year of study, summer semester, elective
branch VU-VT , 1 year of study, summer semester, elective
branch VU-VT , 2 year of study, summer semester, elective
branch VU-IDT , 1 year of study, summer semester, elective
branch VU-IDT , 2 year of study, summer semester, elective
branch VU-VT , 1 year of study, summer semester, elective
branch VU-VT , 2 year of study, summer semester, elective
branch VU-IDT , 1 year of study, summer semester, elective
branch VU-IDT , 2 year of study, summer semester, elective
branch VU-IDT , 1 year of study, summer semester, elective
branch VU-IDT , 2 year of study, summer semester, elective
branch VU-IDT , 1 year of study, summer semester, elective
branch VU-IDT , 2 year of study, summer semester, elective
branch VU-VT , 1 year of study, summer semester, elective
branch VU-VT , 2 year of study, summer semester, elective