Growing Sunflowers on Moontime | Rooting Talismans in Black Earth by Lina Bondarenko
Title: Growing Sunflowers on Moontime | Rooting Talismans in Black Earth
Dims: 30” x 30” x 30”
Material: clay, sunflowers, sunflower seeds, magnet, soil, jute, wood
Price: Email artist for pricing and availability
VESSEL features Lina Bondarenko, whose art practice is rooted in healing the metabolic rift and rewilding perceptions of time through happenings and rituals as mediums of cultural care and environmental kinship. Currently she is an architecture research graduate student at MIT, examining how the urban infrastructure of steep terrain can re-enchant humans with geomorphology and ecology.
“One ongoing year of planting rituals nurtures the soil as a living vessel, hosting sunflowers that root through cosmic, metabolic, ancestral, and terrestrial concepts of time.”
Title: Growing Sunflowers on Moontime | Rooting Talismans in Black Earth
Dims: 30” x 30” x 30”
Material: clay, sunflowers, sunflower seeds, magnet, soil, jute, wood
Price: Email artist for pricing and availability
VESSEL features Lina Bondarenko, whose art practice is rooted in healing the metabolic rift and rewilding perceptions of time through happenings and rituals as mediums of cultural care and environmental kinship. Currently she is an architecture research graduate student at MIT, examining how the urban infrastructure of steep terrain can re-enchant humans with geomorphology and ecology.
“One ongoing year of planting rituals nurtures the soil as a living vessel, hosting sunflowers that root through cosmic, metabolic, ancestral, and terrestrial concepts of time.”
Title: Growing Sunflowers on Moontime | Rooting Talismans in Black Earth
Dims: 30” x 30” x 30”
Material: clay, sunflowers, sunflower seeds, magnet, soil, jute, wood
Price: Email artist for pricing and availability
VESSEL features Lina Bondarenko, whose art practice is rooted in healing the metabolic rift and rewilding perceptions of time through happenings and rituals as mediums of cultural care and environmental kinship. Currently she is an architecture research graduate student at MIT, examining how the urban infrastructure of steep terrain can re-enchant humans with geomorphology and ecology.
“One ongoing year of planting rituals nurtures the soil as a living vessel, hosting sunflowers that root through cosmic, metabolic, ancestral, and terrestrial concepts of time.”