Press Release
What possibilities emerge when we see knowledge, which is presumably fixed, as something growing? The title of the exhibition, Knowledge Is a Garden, derives from an African proverb: “nowledge is like a garden: if it’ not cultivated, it cannot be harvested.”
International ongoing exhibitions
What possibilities emerge when we see knowledge, which is presumably fixed, as something growing? The title of the exhibition, Knowledge Is a Garden, derives from an African proverb: “nowledge is like a garden: if it’ not cultivated, it cannot be harvested.”
Taking this saying as his starting point, Uriel Orlow unpacks the question of what a garden of knowledge could be and what this cultivation and growth means. In keeping with his interests, the artist sets up a dialogue between his own works and those of the museum collection, which for their part raise questions around the production of knowledge. This selection is expanded by loans—rtists from parts of the Global South, who expand the previous geographical focus of the collection on Europe, USA and Latin America, and who engage with suppressed history and traditional knowledge in their artistic practice.
Knowledge Is a Garden is an artistic engagement with the repression of knowledge, the unjust appropriation of the same, and ultimately with new forms of producing and varying knowledge. Knowledge does not consist of neutral facts and information—nd is never all-
With works by: Basel Abbas & Ruanne Abou-
Curated by Uriel Orlow and Nadia Schneider Willen; Curatorial Assistant: Louisa Behr
Additional exhibition : Stretching thresholds, holding streams
For the first time, the Migros Museum für Gegenwartskunst has commissioned an artist working in the field of socially engaged art: Stretching thresholds, holding streams is a project initiated by artist Jeanne van Heeswijk and developed with Sophie Mak-
It symbolizes the flow of ideas, stories, influences, and ethics that move within, through and around the museum—onnecting it to people, places and ways of knowing outside of it. Vitally, streams also denote both directions of movement and refer to how people enter and bring into the museum as much as vice versa. Within the museum, there will be things to see, places to sit comfortably, ideas to question, and different encounters to learn through and with. From September 28, 2024 onwards, streams will weave into and out of the museum at different paces: with changing physical layouts and activities that visitors can engage and reflect on as these streams unfold.
Festival 28 September 2024 -
Uriel Orlow, Theatrum Botanicum Trilogy, 2016–2018. Three-
© ArtCatalyse International / Marika Prévosto 2024 All Rights Reserved