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  • John Miller

    The Ruin of Exchange

  • Nikolaus Hirsch, Markus Miessen (Hg.)

    Critical Spatial Practice. What Is Critical Spatial…

  • Hito Steyerl

    The Wretched of the Screen (e-flux journal )

  • Ilka und Andreas Ruby (Hg.)

    Druot, Lacaton & Vassal. Tour Bois Le Prêtre

  • Mark Rakatansky

    Architecture Words 9. Tectonic Acts of Desire and Doubt

  • Ester Manitto

    A Lesson with AG Fronzoni. From Teaching Design to Design…

  • Paul O'Neill

    The Culture of Curating and the Curating of Culture(s)

  • W. Thaler, M. Mrduljas, V. Kulic

    - Modernism In-between - The mediatory Architectures of…

  • Tony Brook, Adrian Shaughnessy (Hg)

    Unit.Design/Research 01. Ronald Clyne at Folkways

  • Alessandro Ludovico

    Post-Digital Print. The Mutation of Publishing Since 1884

  • Wolfgang Tillmans

    Neue Welt

  • Studienhefte Problemorientiertes Design…

    Lucius Burckhardt. Design heisst Entwurf

  • Studienhefte Problemorientiertes Design…

    Horst Rittel. Die Denkweise von Designern

  • Blind Gallery (Hg.)

    Wim Crouwel

  • Tacet #01

    Who is John Cage?

  • Enqvist, Masucci, Rosendahl, Widenheim…

    Work, Work, Work A Reader on Art and Labour

  • Susan Hiller

    Song Book (Die Gedanken sind frei)

  • Markus Miessen

    Albtraum Partizipation

  • Marijke Steedman (Hg.)

    Gallery as Community. Art, Education, Politics

  • Afterall Books (Hg.)

    From Conceptualism to Feminism: Lucy Lippard's Numbers…

  • Claire Bishop

    Artificial Hells. Participatory Art and the Politics of…

  • Delft University of Technology (Hg.)

    DASH The Eco House. Typologies of Space, Production and…

  • Catherine de Smet, Sara De Bondt (Hg.)

    Graphic Design: History in the Writing (1983–2011)

  • Robin Kinross

    Unjustified Texts. Perspectives on Typography

  • Elke Krasny (Hg.)

    Hands-On Urbanism 1850 - 2012

  • Maria Lind (Hg.)

    Performing the Curatorial With and Beyond Art

  • Jost Hochuli

    Das ABC eines Typografen

  • M. Ziehl, S. Oßwald, O. Hasemann, D.…

    Second Hand Spaces. Recycling Sites Undergoing Urban…

  • Michael Buhrs, Hannes Rössler (Hg.)

    Terunobu Fujimori. Architekt

  • Idea 352

    Video Game Graphic

  • Emanuel Christ, Christoph Gantenbein (…

    Typology. Hong Kong, Rome, New York, Buenos Aires. Review…

  • Slavs and Tatars

    Not Moscow Not Mecca

  • Lisa Robertson, Matthew Stadler (Hg.)

    Revolution. A Reader

  • Andrew Parker

    The Theorist's Mother

  • Okwui Enwezor (Hg.)

    Intense Proximity. The Anthology of the Near and the Far

  • Quentin Meillassoux

    The Number and the Siren

  • Kenneth E. Silver

    Making Paradise. Art, Modernity, and the Myth of the French…

  • Laurenz Brunner

    Amber. Anrhem Mode Biennale

  • Institut Mathildenhöhe Darmstadt (Hg.)

    A House Full of Music. Strategien in Musik und Kunst

  • Sophie Elisabeth Hochhäusl

    Otto Neurath - City Planning. Proposing a socio-political…

  • Susan Morgan (Hg.)

    Piecing Together Los Angeles. An Esther McCoy Reader

  • Magdalena Droste (Ed.)

    Lilly Reich. Designer and Architect

  • Jan Gehl

    Leben zwischen Häusern. Konzepte für den öffentlichen Raum

  • Xavier Antin

    Printing at Home

  • Vladimir Arkhipov

    Home-Made Europe. Contemporary Folk Artifacts

  • Alexander Eichenlaub

    Umbau mit Bestand. Nachhaltige Anpassungsstrategien für…

  • Eyal Weizman

    The Least of All Possible Evils

  • Architecture for Humanity

    Design Like You Give a Damn, Volume 2

  • Théo Lessour

    Berlin Sampler. From Cabaret to Techno: 1904-2012, a…

  • Nomadisch Grün (Hg.)

    Prinzessinnengärten. Anders gärtnern in der Stadt

  • David Harvey

    Rebel Cities. From the Right to the City to the Urban…

  • Kate Fletcher, Lynda Grose

    Fashion & Sustainability. Design for Change

  • Quinn Latimer

    Rumored Animals

  • Nikolaus Gansterer

    Drawing A Hypothesis. Figures of Thought

  • Jürgen Teller

    Bilder und Texte. Literatur

  • Roberto Gargiani, Anna Rosellini (Hg.)

    Le Corbusier. Beton Brut and Ineffable Space (1940 - 1965)

  • Brian O'Doherty

    Atelier und Galerie. Studio and Cube

  • Jill Stoner

    Toward a Minor Architecture

  • Jasper Morisson

    A world without words

  • Helmut Höge

    Spatzen

  • Boris Groys

    Introduction to Antiphilosophy

  • Raimundas Malasauskas

    Paper Exhibition. Selected Writings by Raimundas Malasauskas

  • The Otolith Group

    Thoughtform-La forma del pensiero

  • Gert Selle

    Die eigenen vier Wände. Wohnen als Erinnern

  • Pierre Keller (Hg.)

    Types We Can Make. A Selection of Contemporary Swiss Type…

  • Douglas Crimp

    Our Kind of Movie. The Films of Andy Warhol

  • Simona Malvezzi, Wilfried Kuehn

    Kuehn Malvezzi. Index

  • Garry Neill Kennedy

    The Last Art College. Nova Scotia College of Art and Design…

  • Joan Ockman

    Architecture School. Three Centuries of Educating…

  • Fucking Good Art #29

    Italian Conversations. Art in the Age of Berlusconi

  • Markus Miessen, Nina Valerie…

    Expothesis No2. Waking Up From The Nightmare Of…

  • Christof Migone

    Sonic Somatic. Performances of the Unsound Body

  • Adrian Shaughnessy, Tony Brook

    Kwadraat-Bladen A Series of Graphic Experiments 1955—74

  • 51N4E (Hg.)

    Reasons for Walling a House

  • Ute Frank (Hg.)

    Eklat. Entwerfen und Konstruieren in Lehre, Anwendung und…

  • Felix Denk, Sven von Thun

    Der Klang der Familie. Berlin, Techno und die Wende

  • Walter Benjamin

    The "Berlin Chronicle" Notices

  • Gerald Raunig

    Fabriken des Wissens. Streifen und Glätten 1

  • Jane Bennett

    Vibrant Matter. A Political Ecology of Things

  • Christiane Rösinger

    Liebe wird oft überbewertet. Ein Sachbuch

  • David Harvey

    Die urbanen Wurzeln der Finanzkrise

  • Jeffrey T. Schnapp, Adam Michaels

    The Electric Information Age Book

  • Christian Naujoks

    True Life / In Flames CD/LP

  • Winy Maas

    The Vertical Village. Individual, Informal, Intense

  • Andrew Shea

    Designing for Social Change

  • Ian Bogost

    How to Do Things with Videogames

  • Deborah Schneiderman

    Inside Prefab. The Ready-Made Interior

  • Beatriz Preciado

    Pornotopia. Architektur, Sexualität und Multimedia im…

  • Marc Angélil, Rainer Hehl (Hg.)

    Building Brazil!

  • Klanten, Ehmann, Sinofzik (Hg.)

    Introducing. Visual Identities for Small Businesses

  • Dietmar Dath, Barbara Kirchner

    Der Implex. Sozialer Fortschritt: Geschichte und Idee

  • Eva Grubinger, Jörg Heiser (Hg.)

    Sculpture Unlimited

  • Montreal CCA (Hg.)

    Imperfect Health. The Medicalization of Architecture

  • Jun Igarashi

    Construction of a State

  • Jérôme Knebusch

    Notizen zu Berlin

  • Ryan McGinley

    You and I

  • Magnus Ericson, Ramia Mazé (Hg.)

    Design Act. Socially and Politically Engaged Design Today

  • Nigel Coates

    Narrative Architecture

Justine Blau. Veil of Nature

Processing Process

The three Greek words “phusis kruptesthai philei,” uttered and written by Heraclitus, were always heavy with meaning: heavy with the meaning Heraclitus gave them, and heavy with the meaning future centuries were to believe they discovered in them. For a long time yet, perhaps even forever, they will maintain their mystery. Like Nature, they love to hide.   — Pierre Hadot, The Veil of Isis

Endemic to the Galapagos Islands, Sicyos villosus was collected by Charles Darwin during his journey on the Beagle (1831–36) but is now extinct. This forlorn member of the Cucurbitaceae family is still known to science thanks only to a single specimen preserved in the Sainsbury Laboratory of the Cambridge University Herbarium, where Darwin’s complete botanical collection is preserved. After reading that a group of contemporary scientists were hoping to de-extinct Sicyos villosus using biotechnologies that could recover its DNA from Darwin’s specimen, artist Justine Blau began to investigate what it means to bring a species back to life. She undertook a journey to understand the desire for de-extinction and what it was, exactly, that science was now trying to save. 
       
Through her encounters with researchers and scientists in herbaria and seed banks, as well as her travels to the Galapagos—where she sought out the Sicyos villosus after being told that it might still inhabit the archipelago, but remains undetected—she uncovered a matrix of contradictions that radically challenge the modern scientific conservation complex. As modern science projects its ambition for rationality onto the mysteries of life, nature itself withdraws, hiding among the magic of images and narratives that veil its furtive purpose. As Blau uncovers the conservation complex, her camera also discovers another potency of nature held in abeyance.
                           
JUSTINE BLAU is a visual artist, creating works that explore the various languages and usages of photography, particularly in a vernacular context. She is interested in the role culture plays in shaping an environment or people’s interactions. Many of her works deal with the complex and peculiar relationship humankind maintains with what we qualify as “nature.” Blau was born in Luxembourg in 1977 and studied at Wimbledon College of Art, University of the Arts London.   

ABOUT THE PROCESSING PROCESS SERIES: Unfolding at the intersection of the artist monograph, aesthetic manifesto, and solo exhibition, the series Processing Process celebrates artists’ pathbreaking forays into culture, history, science, ecology, and narrative technique. While focusing on each artist’s singular sites, concerns, and media, the series works to unpack and explore variously situated, site-sensitive, and processual methodologies and their connections to different communities of livelihood and practice. Through this series, K. Verlag is committed to working closely with contributors to develop and produce provocative, genre-defying research creations that further experiment with and expand the book-as-exhibition.


Justine Blau
Justine Blau. Veil of Nature

Processing Process

K. Verlag, 2024, 978-3-947858-33-0