RouteTOP

2016 Leg One Oslo > Antwerp ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  • September 17 Oslo, Norway
  • September 21 Vejle, Denmark
  • September 28 London, England
  • October 25 Cardiff, Wales
  • November 1 Antwerp, Belgium
  •    
2017 Leg Two Antwerp > Santander ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  • April 18 Antwerp, Belgium
  • April 20-30 Jersey Island, UK
  • May 7-10 San Sebastián, Spain
  • May 15-22 Santander, Spain
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Leg Three Mallorca > Istanbul
  • Mallorca, Spain Bethlehem, Palestine Istanbul, Turkey

WindTOP

Keeping Us Afloat

Seed Journey is generously supported by a diverse ecology of arts organizations, grants, ports and individuals. Each stop on the journey is hosted by an institution or project that enables exhibitions, public programs and boat logistics; mooring + port fees.

  • Host Institutions

    SALT, Istanbul, Turkey
    Henie Onstad Art Center, Oslo, Norway
    Arts Institute, University of Wisconsin, Madison
    Delfina Foundation, London, UK
    Artes Mundi, Cardiff, Wales
    M KHA, Antwerp, Belgium
    Middleheim Museum, Antwerp, Belgium
    The Morning Boat, Jersey Island, UK
    Tabakalera, San Sebastián, Spain
    Haziera, Cristina Enea Foundation, San Sebastián, Spain
    La Fundación Botín, Santander, Spain
    INLAND, Asturias, Spain
    The Greenhorns
    Sharjah Foundation, Sharjah

    Boat Logistics:

    Hermitage Community Moorings
    Port of Antwerp

  • Individuals

    Founding Crew Members
    On a winter eve in San Francisco, Ann Hatch at the Workshop Residence, hosted a group of supporters who took the first step in supporting this epic voyage:

    Eric Mcdougall
    Chris Vroom
    Fanny Singer
    Jim Voorhies + Nate Padavick
    Lisa Sebastian
    Larry Rinder + Colter Jacobsen
    Seed Fund
    Christine Nielsen
    Matt Gonzalez
    Hoy Buell
    Jim Melchert
    Yosh Asato + David Baker

    Land-based Crew

    Paul Rauschelbach – Chief Data Strategist
    Craig Summerhill – All things web
    Elizabeth Thomas – Editor in Cheif
    Phoebe Kuo, –Woodshop Hands and Time
    Griff Williams / Gallery 16 – Fundraising Fulfillment Support
    Marc Badal Pijuan, San Sebastián host, logistics
    Anne Beate Hovind, Production/Contract Negotiations
    Jarl Solberg, Production/Contract Negotiations

    Donations

    Therese Oxford
    Sandra Ceas
    Grace Kuo
    Bodil Tullberg
    Henrique Eisenmann

  • Grants

    Seed Fund
    A granting foundation that supports projects that enliven the public realm and advance the quality of civic life.

    Greenhorns
    Greenhorns are partners on the Greek stop(s) in Leg 3 of Seed Journey. Gathering the traditional grains from islands, and bringing to the newly restored windmills of the Monastery of the Apocalypse, Patmos for September 2018.

Program

March 13, 2018
St. Helier, Jersey Island

The Morning Boat

Sunday, April 23
8:00
Departure
-
Willemdok
After a gentle winter in Antwerp, a crew of 8 and 6 castaways join us into the Schelde on a Rubenesque day of pink skies and bulbous clouds. Along the shorelines, static windmills sat amongst the giants of industry; wind, nuclear and chemical fertilizers.
April 23 - 30, 2017
Jersey Island, UK

The Morning Boat

Sunday, April 23
2:00
Arrival
-
Albert Pier
Greetings, music, radio connection, smoke signals, brewing grain delivery/gifting, followed by a procession to Samares Manor.

3:00
Communal Baking
-
Samora Bakery
Communal Baking with Jersey Transition Movement
May 7 - 10, 2017
Donostia, Spain

Tabakalera & Cristina Enea Foundation

TUESDAY, MAY 9
10:00
WORKSHOP
Explorando Territorios Fronterizos
-
A conversation with Futurefarmers, Campo Adentro, Kanpoko Bulegoa & Baserriko Arte Sarea

18:00
CONFERENCE
Cider & Modernity: The Oceanic Journey of The Peasant Cultures
-
Marc Badal will speak about original sin to industrial paradise, Amy Franceschini will present Seed Journey and Jaocko Errekondo agrarian history and peasant culture through the cider.

WEDNESDAY, MAY 10
10:00
EXCURSION
Ancient apple tree collection Domaine d'Abbadie & Art collectives of the North Basque Country
-
Hendaia

18:00
CONFERENCE
Drawn Together
-
Collective creation of a map in the Cristina Enea's seed archive with Futurefarmers.
May 15-21, 2017
Santander, Spain

Botin Foundation

WEDNESDAY, MAY 17
10:00 - 20:00
WORKSHOP
Maybe Memory is a Process of Forgetfulness with Alfonso Borragán
-
A collective laboratory to explore the uninterrupted process of production, erosion and re·production of memory.

THURSDAY, MAY 18
16:00 - 20:00
Open Lab
ELECTROMAGIC COMMONS
-
Setting up lab and demonstration Navi-logger/Open Street Map

FRIDAY, MAY 19
10h- 20h
Workshop + Performative Event
ELECTROMAGIC COMMONS
-
(Open lab) Workshop radio transmission station - Performative event

SATURDAY, MAY 20
10h- 14h
Workshop
ELECTROMAGIC COMMONS
-
Balloon mapping of the area.

16h- 20h
Workshop
ECOLOGICAL MEMORY
-
Ignacio Chapela
Microbial life carries with it memories of environments, cultures, landscapes. We will study honey, as a medium in which these memories are maintained, embedded in a natural preservative produced by bees. Pollen, spores, and other invisible life-forms will be visualized using methods available to the public.

SUNDAY, MAY 21
10h- 13h
Open Lab
MEMORY DEVICES COLLECTION
-
Alfonso Borragán

13h- 17h
Gathering + Procession
SEED CEREMONY
-
Futurefarmers
An gathering of farmers, bakers and millers who exchange seeds, knowledge and contribute selections to Seed Journey to carry further on...

A procession of provisions will move from Center Botin to Seed Journey Boat

17h
Walk
-
Ignacio Chapela
The trajectory of this 7 day Walk — Aristotelian peripatetic thinking, and ancient memory arts — will cross the mountains that have emerged from the tectonic tensions of this boundary, from the Cantabrian littoral to the Sierra del Escudo de Cabuérniga, the Picos de Europa past the Naranjo de Bulnes, and down the shepherd’s way to the lakes of Covadonga and finally Cangas de Onís, where we will find haven with the initiative INLAND - Campo Adentro, and their Shepherds’ School. The public will be invited to join this walk in its entirety or in segments.

CrewTOP

Captains

  • Johan J. Petersen Oslo, Norway ~

    Johan has circumnavigated the globe by sailboat. He has sailed to Antarctica, the Arctic, Russia, Africa and the entire length of Norway without engine. He studied navigation, anthropology and photojournalism and has worked as navigator, rescueman, diver, journalist, photographer and teaches navigation and safety.

  • Børre G. Petersen Asker, Norway ~

    Børre has extensive sailing and travelling experience. He has sailed across the Indian Ocean, around the North Atlantic, to Spitsbergen, the Baltic and more. He studied business and administration and is currently running a small investment firm.

  • Carl Emil Petersen Oslo, Norway ~

    Oslo, Norway Carl Emil has sailed around the globe on sailing yachts. He has studied business and anthropology, and has worked as a merchant sailor, election observer, account manager, with PR at the Etnographic museum. When he is not working, he tends to spend his time reading, rock climbing, sailing and visiting prisons.

Rotating Crew

MICHAEL TAUSSIG

On-board Anthropologist Colombia Unviersity, New York

Michael Taussig is an anthropologist known for his provocative ethnographic studies and unconventional style as an academic. He was born in Australia in 1940 where he studied medicine at the University of Sydney. He earned a Ph.D. at the London School of Economics and is currently a professor of anthropology at Columbia University in New York. Taussig is acclaimed for his commentaries on shamanism, mimesis and alterity, the Nervous System, defacement, Walter Benjamin, commodity fetishism, and ficto-criticism.

ON BOARD
Mastery of Non Mastery

Professor Taussig will be applying the latest technologies of reflexive, post-humanism, post-modernism, bio-powered, solar-enhanced, Mastery of Non-Mastery to the crew of the Ship of Fools and Seeds, shake it a little, and see what happens, bearing in mind Walter Benjamin's adage, "the left hand strikes the decisive blows."

DIDIER DEMORCY

Farmer's apprentice, artist, researcher Solwaster, Belgium

Born in 1965 in Stembert, Verviers, East-Belgium. Didier is interested in non-academic knowledges; oral cultures (reclaiming and emerging); collective and innovative ways of political actions; auto-organized groups and systems; soil restoration, mushrooms and microscopic live; relations to animals; breeding sheep; grains cultivation, milling and bread baking; fermentation processes; plants structures, morphology and development... specificities, styles of the surroundings.

Some may have seen Didier's work with Isabelle Mauz, When Wolves Settle: A Panorama at ZKM/ Making Things Public in 2005 and his Vital Phantasy in the group exhibition Animism curated by Anselm Franke.

ON BOARD
Attendant to non-human entities

During the journey, Didier will meet tales of that kind which will flow to us.

VIVIEN SANSOUR

Writer/Photographer Bethlehem, Palestine

Vivien is a writer, producer, and photographer living in Beit Jala. She has worked with farmers in the field for over six years, capturing their stories for the wider world. She is currently a doctoral candidate for the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences at North Carolina State University.

ON BOARD
Resilient Seeds

Vivien will link the larger Seed Journey route to her homebase in Bethlehem, Palestine where she has been documenting and working with farming communities who are preserving ancient methods of cultivation.

MARTIN LUNDBERG

Navigator Oslo, Norway

Martin Lundberg Oslo, Norway Martin hails from the region of the sun, Skåne, Sweden. He is an anti-disciplinarian maker and creator of Oslo Fjord Sauna in 2013, a floating sauna made entirely from found materials in the Olso Fjord. Today this sauna is a provocation to the city of Oslo to activate and maintain the fjord and coastline as a lively accessible common.

ON BOARD
Ethnography of the On-Board Anthropologist

Martin will observe and document Michael Taussigs work and help with provisioning.

HANAN BENAMMAR

Artist Oslo, Norway

By putting herself aside of the authorial persona, Hanan considers art as an activity essentially enriched by the collective, expanded by hazardous changes, mistakes and misuses. Most of her projects are realized on a long time scale. The monumentality of the time factor, effort and people involved, opposed to the essential low coefficient of visibility of her projects is the tension that drives her.

She focuses on “difficult” landscapes, arid and deserted, the ones that are physically and mentally challenging. Geopolitical, environmental issues and traditional oral & social practices are the main reason she has fixed her attention to these regions of the world.

Hanan studied at the Art Academy of Oslo and the Dutch Art Institute. Her work is mostly based on music, sound, writings, talks, field recordings and different archival strategies. All her projects start with a journey.

Hanan has worked with Gallery BOA, Ul tima, Mosaic Rooms, Black Box Theater, aria (artist residency in Algiers), the Museum of Yugoslav History and TAAK. She is a member of the experimental opera noise project feilkontroll.

ON BOARD
Desert Garden

Hanan will focus on desert territories and how it could apply to an art practice. She will work with seeds she has been collecting as well as information about their uses (food, magical rituals, medicinal powers, etc.). This is a lifetime project, which can evolve in many directions. At the moment, it is close to a small seed bank and was materialized during an exhibition together with a sound piece suggesting an atopic time frame.

FERNANDO GARCÍA DORY

Artist Asturias, Spain

Fernando García-Dory's work engages specifically with the relationship between culture and nature now, as manifested in multiple contexts, from landscape and the rural, to desires and expectations concerned with identity, through to (global) crisis, utopia and the potential for social change. He studied Fine Arts and Rural Sociology, and now preparing his PhD on Agroecology. Interested in the harmonic complexity of biological forms and processes, his work addresses connections and cooperation, from microorganisms to social systems, and from traditional art languages such as drawing to collaborative agroecological projects, actions, and cooperatives

ON BOARD
Sea Fruit

Fernando will look to the native cultural understanding of marine ecology, talasonimia (the knowledge of the names of sites in the sea) , related with the activities of small fishermen using traditional techniques, that allow the sustainability and reproduction of fishing resources and local economies. This archive of names and knowledge will be shared with Slow Fish International.

AMY FRANCESCHINI

Artist San Francisco, USA

Amy founded Futurefarmers in 1995, a group of art and farming practitioners. A consistent line through her work reveals sustained questioning about how “nature” and “culture” are perceived. She uses various modes to uncover histories and currents related to this divide by challenging systems of exchange and tools used to “hunt” and “gather.” Her work manifests as temporary public art, exhibitions, publications, bus tours, public programs and permanent public art. Franceschini is also currently the lead artist of Flatbread Society, a permanent public artwork in one of the common areas in Bjørvika in Oslo, Norway.

ON BOARD
The Farm that Sailed Away...

Amy will tune her senses to record "the remarkable occurances" of human and non-human agencies that mark the journey in the contemporay age of sail. A self-made pinhole camera, log book and the practice of memorizing will evoke new rituals of paying attention.

IGNACIO CHAPELA

Microbial Ecologist University of California, Berkeley

Since 1996, he has advised national govern-ments and multilateral institutions on policy-making on genetic engineering and sovereign-ty over genetic resources. He assists indigenous organizations and NGOs in Latin America and elsewhere to meet challenges related to genetic engineering. Chapela is actively involved in the debate on biodiversity loss, its economic and social consequences and its connections to technology policy. He is a member of the Board of Directors of the Council for Responsible Genetics and a member of the Scientific Board of the Sunshine Project, dedicated to bring light into the world of bio-warfare and bio-defense.

ON BOARD
Pollen Monitoring- Mapping

Atop one of the masts Ignacio Chapela’s ABRA will sample pollen with a time-space signature attached to samples of microscopic particles. Time is drawn by a clock; space by GPS; phylogeny by ABRA. The result is a "slice" of time-space-phylogeny the "shape" of Colin Archer's trajectory.

JOE RILEY

Artist, Sailor New York, New York

Joe is an artist and Master of Yachts 200-ton Offshore Limited Mate. He has sailed aboard 112' schooner Argo, biked atop abandoned railroads in the U.S., paraded a mobile radio network in Ukraine, and helped organize the longest student-led occupation in United States history while studying at Cooper Union. He has been faculty at Bruce High Quality Foundation University, a resident at Izolyatsia, and a collaborator with Futurefarmers. He teaches boatbuilding in Brooklyn, NY public schools as well as letterpress printing and metalworking at Cooper Union.

ON BOARD
Visual Signalling

Joe will serve as a sailor, documentarian, and line between the worlds of art and sailing. He will also research how the languages of maritime visual signaling and hyper-communication relate to the sense and strategy of being lost at sea.

JØRUND AASE FALKENBERG

Artist Oslo, Norway

Jørund Aase Falkenberg works in the crossingpoint between concept-shape, reality-utopia and politics-spirit, he engages questions concerning mysticism, universal meaning, cultural change and animal rights. After studying at Oslo Academy of Fine Art (MA, 2008) he has exhibited in venues such as The Young Artists Society (UKS, Oslo), Baku Contemporary Art Center (Aserbajdsjan), The Drawing Room (London), The Nordic House (Reykjavik), Artconnexion (Lille) and Stavanger Art Museum.

ON BOARD
Base of Sky

Jørund will use microbial cellulose (cellulose cultivated in bacterial culture – acetibacter xylinium etc.) to build kites with different designs. The kites will be flown from the boat at sea and as performances on land. The bringing together of a material produced by microorganisms and the constructing of, and playing with, kites, can be seen to have many interesting links and implications. Not being weaved by human hands or man made machines, the microbial cellulose represent a fusion of nature and technology. Kite flying is both an iconic image of the child´s spontanous joy of playing and human yearning to transcend its own limits.

AGENCY

Artist Brussels, Belgium

Founded by artist Kobe Matthys in 1992, Agency is compiling a growing list of ‘things’ that resist easy categorization between culture and nature, between man-made creations and facts, between subjects and objects, humans and non-humans, individuals and collectives. Most of these controversies are derived from legal disputes over intellectual property.

Agency calls things forth from it’s list via varying assemblies inside exhibitions, performances, publications, etc… Each assembly speculates topologically on a different question of the performative consequences of the apparatus of intellectual property for an ecology of art practices and paying attention to other types of agencies.

ON BOARD
assembly

agency will select a number of ‘things’ speculating on the question “what if common things become included within art practices?” it will focus on things that are considered common because they are part of folklore and traditional knowledges. folklore is often described as being common, undefined, anonymous, untitled, unregistered, etc... the intellectual property requirements of origin, identification, fixation, etc... are often incompatible with folklore. folklore is considered to be "common" and to reside inside “the public domain”. but folk artists are often guardians, holders, keepers or stewards of traditional knowledges. their different belongings involve different obligations and commitments, which are attachments they are often not able to reformulate at their own will. agency pays attention to the operative consequences of the apparatus of intellectual property for the diversity of ecologies of art practices.

MARTHE VAN DESSEL

Artist, Activist Antwerp, Belgium

Marthe is an activist and performer who creates interfaces, devices & protocols to instigate our urban and institutional hardware. She engages in the administrative, cultural, political dimension of personal and collective identities. By triggering intersubjective alliances she confronts the 'self & other' to the commons, co-authorship and the redistribution into the public domain.

Marthe graduated Political and Social Sciences at the University of Antwerp (1998) and Graphic Design (2002) in St-Lukas. She was a researcher at the Jan Van Eyck Academy in Maastricht in 2005, a UNIDEE resident in 2007 and has been a guest lecturer at St-Lukas in Antwerp, the Royal Academy of Ghent and the Higher Institute of Fine Art.

ON BOARD
Looking Glass

Radio Ramona Marthe will use her streaming radio Ramona to capture interview, texture and daily life on board and on land.

ALFONSO BORRAGÁN

Artist London, United Kingdom

Alfonso devises situations and artefacts that are born to be consumed becoming experiences that seek to change in some way the perception of reality, interfere in it or simply imagine it. His work only exists on a symbiotic level, intrinsically connected to man, an organic work that only comes to life through him and disappears with him. It is consumed with the experience, which at times dilates the work and expands it through oral transmission, the source of human growth, the communication of stories and memory.

ON BOARD
Maybe memory is a process of forgiveness.

Alfonso will work with the inconsistency of memory on the boat. He will consider the boat as a lucid camera, a vessel of experiences where to imprint the ecology of living system. He aims to generate a latent image of the journey by means of using canaries/octopus in the boat. One ecosystem will record the other one. The brain of this living technology will transform into electrical and chemical stimulus of the experience. The organ will become a container of this stimulus storing what science call memory. At the end of the journey the animals will have to be frozen cryogenically and sent to the Biological Centre in Barcelona. Once at the centre a group of neurologists working at the B.R.A.I.N. project will read the memories of this brain and translate into a report.

AUDREY SNYDER

Chef New York, New York

Audrey Snyder is an artist, chef, and a collaborator with Futurefarmers since 2007. Her work investigates the intersection of food systems and cultural production, where examination of simple practice cultivates complex thinking. She has toured the United States by bicycle, was a chef aboard Station to Station train journey, a resident artist on the remote Rabbit Island, and is the creator of Waterline Ceramics. Audrey hails from San Francisco, California and is currently based in Brooklyn, New York.

ON BOARD
Chef

Audrey will be the on-board chef and will provision the vessel throughout its course — linking the movement of food, goods, and ideas by land and sea.

ANNA VITALE

Poet New York, New York

Anna writes from where she is, which is usually somewhere she used to be or would like to be. "To write in the midst of the present feels like an impossible but interesting goal," she once told me. "I," she admitted, "have no idea what the present is," except it was clear to me when I interviewed her, that the present exists, like our love.

ON BOARD
On Land: Postcards for the Present

Anna will write postcards destined for Seed Journey stopping points. Wanting to provide a record of the ground for those on board, she will seek news stories, personal accounts, art exhibits--anything to write off of and relay--that might aid in the production of a welcome interruption to being at sea.

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