Compelling art gets to root of cultural removal and plant introductions
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Consequences of bygone deeds reverberating down the centuries are explored in Shipping Roots, an exquisite, insightful and globally relevant new exhibition by Keg de Souza at Inverleith House from Friday, March 24 to Sunday, August 27. Occupying two floors of the gallery sitting at the heart of the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh (RBGE), it is a compelling invitation to consider how the introduction of plant material impacts landscapes and lives in a multitude of ways.
Flowing through the rooms of the gallery are three strands of seldom explored narratives: recalling the spread of the distinctive Australian eucalyptus, often prized by gardeners but contributing to alarming destruction in habitats around the world; the American prickly pear (Opuntia), a cactus shipped to India and Australia as habitat for the lucrative cochineal insect; and the “hitchhiker” seeds and burrs that made their way from Australia to British woollen mills.
The common theme is empire: looking back to times when British expansionism was based on exploitation and its mass fleet of merchant ships transported people and goods along the ocean trading routes of the world. Shipping Roots is the artist’s first major UK exhibition and draws on her own life experiences to address the impact of moving plants and people between continents. As a person of Goan heritage, whose ancestral lands in India were colonised, she lives as a “settler” on unceded Gadigal land known the world over as Sydney, its colonial name and significantly the landing point for the “First Fleet” of 11 British ships carrying around 1,500 people - including 700 convicts - to start a new penal colony there in 1788.
But, far from focussing on the past, this is an exhibition exploring current and future dilemmas. The links between Australia, India and the UK demonstrate how the entanglement of plants and people are inextricably tied to the understanding of place and a notion of belonging. Long gone misdemeanours are also playing their part in the biodiversity crisis and climate emergency of the 21st century as non-native species take their toll on habitats not able to cope with their presence.
The artist said the intentions behind Shipping Roots was to produce an exhibition to make people reflect on the past in order to think for the future. The destructive impact still witnessed today, invoked by the British Empire and accelerated by European colonial expansion, continues to massively alter ecosystems. We now live in a world where the legacy of colonialism on land and landscape through this movement of plants has left lasting impacts, many of which have propelled us towards climate crisis.
She explained: “As artist in residence, over an extended period of time in Edinburgh during 2022, I had invaluable interactions with RBGE scientists and conservation horticulturists, as well as extensive access to its living and preserved plant collections, alongside its library and archives. Given the time to undertake my research and learn of the experiences of individuals in an organisation dedicated to exploring the world of plants and conserving biodiversity helped me understand the RBGE Archives in the present day and add dimension to this exhibition.”
First of the three strands, Blue Haze echoes the journey of the Eucalyptus away from its culturally significant Aboriginal land to destinations around the globe, including the artist’s Indian ancestral land where it is the most common tree in timber plantations. It has been utilised for a raft of products from road cobbles to telegraph poles. Now, covering a land mass area over 22 million hectares worldwide, in many countries these prolific trees are contributing to environmental devastation by lowering water tables and increasing fire risk.
In Green Hell the spotlight is on the lasting impact of failed attempts to establish cochineal dye industries in India and Australia by introducing both the insect from which a bright red colour is extracted and the invasive prickly pear cactus on which it feeds.
Closer to home, Fleece Fugitives tells how the movement and spread of plants is not always intentional. When the high-quality fleeces of Australian sheep breeds were transported across the seas some were carrying hidden hitchhikers in the form of seeds and burrs. The British wool industry inadvertently allowed these tiny stowaways to escape through wool waste or “shoddy” and in the effluent from the mills. Once released, seeds propagated and diversified the landscape along riverbanks.
Applying a raft of vibrant and cool colours, an array of textures, natural dyes and materials and perfumes, Shipping Roots stimulates the imaginations and senses of both adults and children. Further reason to linger in Inverleith House comes from items from the Herbarium and Archives, with the addition of rooms offering floor jigsaws, wooden building blocks, reading chairs and maps.
Emma Nicolson, Head of Creative Programmes at RBGE, said it was important to host Shipping Roots: “This fascinating exploration of plant movement and colonialism is beautiful and evocative. Its themes are relevant to audiences around the world and have real synergy with who we are as a research institute. While many habitats remain vulnerable to the impact of plants shipped to their shores more than two hundred years ago, still we are witnessing contemporary examples of the wrong species – often in their masses - being planted in the wrong places. In addressing the great challenges of the biodiversity crisis and climate emergency, we need to encourage greater understanding of these fundamental issues. By broadening the conversation, we stand better chance of seeing real progress.”
A companion book to the exhibition will be published and a number of complementary events are planned for during the run. Shipping Roots, which is part of the Edinburgh Art Festival from July 27 to August 27, is supported by the Outset Transformative Grant; the Australian Government and the British Council as part of the UK/Australia Season; the Australian Government through the Australia Council, its arts funding and advisory body; the NSW Government through Create NSW; and a City of Parramatta Council Community Grant.
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For further information, interviews or images, please respond to this email or contact Shauna Hay on 07824 529 028, Suzie Huggins on 07385 491 460 or Sandra Donnelly on 07312 128 637
EDITOR’S NOTES
Keg de Souza is an artist of Goan ancestry who lives and works on unceded Gadigal land and explores the politics of space through temporary architecture, radical pedagogy and food politics. This investigation of social and spatial environments is influenced by architectural training, squatting and organising, as well as personal experiences of colonisation – from her own ancestral lands being colonised to living as a settler on the unceded lands of other people. Keg often creates projects that focus on pedagogy to centre voices that are often marginalised - for learning about Place. Keg has made projects for: South London Gallery; Artspace, Sydney; Setouchi Triennale; Biennale of Sydney; Contemporary Art Gallery, Vancouver; Delfina Foundation, London; Atlas Arts, Isle of Skye; Auckland Triennial and Jakarta Biennale. Keg was recently awarded a PhD through the Wominjeka Djeembana Research Lab, MADA, Monash University.
A book accompanying the exhibition will be available to buy from the RBGE shop and Inverleith House in April: £9.99. It depicts the exquisite work and important explorations of the artist, including installation shots of the exhibition. The book contains a collection of narratives from international writers.
Inverleith House was designed in 1774 by David Henderson for the Rocheid family and was the official residence of successive Regius Keepers (directors) of the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh until it became the founding home of the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, from 1960 to 1984. Since 1986 it has run a continuous programme of temporary exhibitions spanning visual art and botanical science under the auspices of the Garden, which recognises the need for art as well as science in our appreciation and understanding of the natural world, making it pre-eminent amongst botanic gardens. For more information visit https://www.rbge.org.uk/media-centre/press-releases/current/new-vision-for-inverleith-house-revealed/ or follow @RBGECreative
Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh (RBGE) is a leading international research organisation delivering knowledge, education, and plant conservation action around the world. In Scotland, its four Gardens at Edinburgh, Benmore, Dawyck and Logan attract more than a million visitors each year. It operates as a Non Departmental Public Body established under the National Heritage (Scotland) Act 1985, principally funded by the Scottish Government. It is also a registered charity, managed by a Board of Trustees appointed by Ministers. Its mission is “To explore, conserve and explain the world of plants for a better future.”
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