Episode 21: Kinship with Plants

 

Millennials are obsessed with house plants, driven in large part by an interest in self-care and wellness. Plants are good for our mental health, and thanks to social media, they’ve become increasingly desirable for their aesthetic. However, what we tend to forget is that making us feel better, and livening up our urban dwellings is the least they do for us. Plants provide the core basis for life on Earth. Without them, we wouldn’t be able to breathe, and we’d have nothing to eat. Despite how essential they are to our survival, we take them for granted. In this episode, we explore how turning plants into art, can help us to develop a deeper understanding and empathy toward them.

 

Guests

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Alice Juan Zhang

Alice Yuan Zhang studied at the University of California, Berkeley. She is a mixed reality artist, designer, and program organizer. See her work here.

Alice Yuan Zhang is a mixed reality artist, designer, and program organizer. Her work bridges the sacredness of natural environments with the speculative power of human-made ones, inviting exploration into interspecies empathy, generative networks, and the illusion of agency. She is the co-organizer of virtual care lab, a current resident artist at CultureHub, and an involved member of NAVEL. Alice studied at the University of California, Berkeley.

 
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Alexander Kaye

Alexander Kaye is an artist. His practice began in writing and producing music and has since expanded into sound and visual art. See his work here.

Alexander Kaye is an artist born near Detroit Michigan and currently residing in Los Angeles California. His practice began in writing and producing music and has since expanded into sound and visual art. He creates experimental music with modular synthesis, field recordings, audio manipulation, chance/aleatoric techniques, and traditional instrumentation. Often finding creative guidance through random operations, he embraces unknown variables as part of the process that influences all of his work.

 
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Adrienne Adar

Adrienne Adar is a sound artist and photographer based in Los Angeles. See her work here.

"Close your eyes, prick your ears, and from the softest sound to the wildest noise, from the simplest tone to the highest harmony, from the most violent passionate scream to the gentlest words of sweet reason, it is but Nature who speaks, revealing her being, her power, her life, and her relatedness, so that a blind person, to whom the infinitely visible world is denied, can grasp an infinite vitality in what can be heard."

-Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe

Adrienne Adar is a sound artist and photographer based in Los Angeles. She creates interactive work, often incorporating living plants and technology in site-specific installations. Adar animates plants with sound, seeking to activate unexpected connections to the natural environment. Adar received her MFA from NYU/International Center of Photography and studied at the Slade School of Art, London. Her work has been shown in Los Angeles, New York, Wyoming, London, and Seoul, Korea, as well as Beijing, Shanghai, and Tianjin, China. She is a participating organizer of High Desert Test Sites in Joshua Tree, CA and a member of the Southern California Succulent Society.

 

Special links

To find out more about Requiem for Lost Plants:

You can read more about Adrienne’s work via the press links below:

Social media links for Adrienne:

Hear more from Adrienne on:

Tracklisting

Ann Chase - A Chant For Your Plants (1976)

Hiroshi Yoshimura - Green

Nina Simone - Beautiful Land

Salami Rose Joe Louis - Drifting

*With music from Sun Araw and Callie Ryan

Listen to show playlist on spotify

 

Playlist

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Yewande Pearse