Between Us and Nature – A Reading Club
Sina Ribak & Eva-Fiore Kovacovsky
in collaboration with Zabriskie Buchladen für Kultur und Natur
All flyers are designed by Lorena Carras
Reading together out loud, sharing voices and listening is our practice of reciprocity. In this reading & gathering we want to create extra time to connect. Especially as we live in challenging times we feel it is important to get to know and to nourish our community.
I can lose my hands, and still live. I can lose my legs and still live. I can lose my eyes and still live. I can lose my hair, eyebrows, nose, arms, and many other things and still live. But if I lose the air I die. If I lose the sun I die. If I lose the earth I die. If I lose the water I die. If I lose the plants and animals I die. All of these things are more a part of me, more essential to my every breath, than is my so-called body. What is my real body? (Jack D. Forbes)
Almost in every symbiosis plants and their positive relationships are involved. Plants form the structure of ecosystems and ultimately provide food for all other members of the community. Andreas Gigon
Lynn Margulis taught us to practice a symbiotic worldview related to photosynthetic processes. Zoë Schlanger’s book The Light Eaters goes beyond the wonders of photosynthesis and touches upon the interrelationships of microorganisms and plants. The collective reading offers voices from scientists, journalists, plants, and microorganisms that offer a ‘New Understanding of Life on Earth’.
As you read this, multiple devastating forest fires are burning somewhere around the globe. Fire is more than a dangerous side-effect of global heating, it is an integral part of ecologies and human history. And contrary to the proverb, fire can be fought with fire.
The extinction of both known and unknown species is a terrible loss. Attuning our collective reading practice to the Goldrausch 2024 exhibition, I only work with lost and found, we turn to the worldmaking of plants. In an ongoing cycle of change the elements of sunlight, air, and water never get lost but are transformed into new forms of life.
We invite you to celebrate the 50th anniversary edition of the Between Us and Nature – A Reading Club! This time on the ground of the Global Field - der Weltacker, in the Botanische Volkspark Blankenfelde-Pankow, in the north-east of Berlin.
Between Us and Nature – A Reading Club
Sina Ribak & Eva-Fiore Kovacovsky
in collaboration with Zabriskie Buchladen für Kultur und Natur
All flyers are designed by Lorena Carras
Reading together out loud, sharing voices and listening is our practice of reciprocity. In this reading & gathering we want to create extra time to connect. Especially as we live in challenging times we feel it is important to get to know and to nourish our community.
I can lose my hands, and still live. I can lose my legs and still live. I can lose my eyes and still live. I can lose my hair, eyebrows, nose, arms, and many other things and still live. But if I lose the air I die. If I lose the sun I die. If I lose the earth I die. If I lose the water I die. If I lose the plants and animals I die. All of these things are more a part of me, more essential to my every breath, than is my so-called body. What is my real body? (Jack D. Forbes)
Almost in every symbiosis plants and their positive relationships are involved. Plants form the structure of ecosystems and ultimately provide food for all other members of the community. Andreas Gigon
Lynn Margulis taught us to practice a symbiotic worldview related to photosynthetic processes. Zoë Schlanger’s book The Light Eaters goes beyond the wonders of photosynthesis and touches upon the interrelationships of microorganisms and plants. The collective reading offers voices from scientists, journalists, plants, and microorganisms that offer a ‘New Understanding of Life on Earth’.
As you read this, multiple devastating forest fires are burning somewhere around the globe. Fire is more than a dangerous side-effect of global heating, it is an integral part of ecologies and human history. And contrary to the proverb, fire can be fought with fire.
The extinction of both known and unknown species is a terrible loss. Attuning our collective reading practice to the Goldrausch 2024 exhibition, I only work with lost and found, we turn to the worldmaking of plants. In an ongoing cycle of change the elements of sunlight, air, and water never get lost but are transformed into new forms of life.
We invite you to celebrate the 50th anniversary edition of the Between Us and Nature – A Reading Club! This time on the ground of the Global Field - der Weltacker, in the Botanische Volkspark Blankenfelde-Pankow, in the north-east of Berlin.
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