On Friday 14/06 at 19:30-20:30 PM CET at iMAL (Brussels), by the Nos Futurs Radio station, a panel discussion titled Belonging to Land & Country in the Anthropocene will be held, engaging with the role of vernacular, local and indigenous knowledge in transforming our food systems. This panel will take place in person, no livestream, but will be recorded and archived. The discussion will be in English.
This talk is taking place as a satellite event of the NaturArchy exhibition, as part of the dedicated public programme.
Watch a recording of the event
Before the panel at 19:00 PM CET the artwork Invisible Seeds - developed from two years of collaboration between artist Gala Berger, Shipibo-Conibo artists including Metsá Rama and agricultural policy and research input from Irene Guerrero Fernandez (JRC) - will be presented at iMAL as a brief introduction for the talk. The centre will be open late in occasion of these events.
Attending the panel & presentation of the work will be free but registration is required on iMAL website – please arrive for 19:00 PM CET to allow for ticket checking and to attend the artwork presentation.
Panelists: Elle Márjá Eira (Artist, composer, filmmaker and producer), Gala Berger (visual artist and independent curator), Metsá Rama (Shipibo artist, educator and translator)
Moderator: Saskia Vermeylen (Researcher, University of Strathclyde),
About the panel:
The way ‘Western’ cultures relate to land is often shaped by extractivist and agricultural practices framed by an ideology that sees land as a ‘thing’ that can be owned and exploited for the benefit of human development. There is hardly any acknowledgement of the importance of non-human or more-than-human beings, nor an understanding that we are all interconnected into this world. Against the background of rapid climate change, we are forced to contemplate the loss of land and ecosystems on which we depend for our everyday life. In this informal conversation with Indigenous knowledge holders we explore how we can reconnect again to the land and nurture a renewed sense of place, country, and belonging as the bedrock of a decentred relationship with nature and more-than-humans?
The aim is to feel the land, not as a resource or scenery but as an inner territory, as a member of the family, reflect on the loss of this intimate relationship with the land in Western culture and nurture a new sense of place and belonging based on the wisdom of Indigenous peoples. And to raise awareness amongst the audience about the relationship of indigenous people to land and country, explaining why it is under threat and what solutions could be found.
What: Panel discussion on Belonging to Land & Country - registration required via iMAL website.
Where: iMAL, 30 Quai des Charbonnages, Brussels
When: 14/06/2024
19:00-19:30 PM CET Invisible Seeds presentation
19:30-20:30 PM CET Belonging to Land & Country panel
Details
- Publication date