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  • Juan Bonet, Sean Kissane (Hg.)

    Vertical Thoughts. Morton Feldman and the Visual Arts

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    Dan Graham's New Jersey

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    The Sense of Sound

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    Architects' Journeys. Building, Traveling, Thinking

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    Making Noise. From Babel to the Big Bang and Beyond

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    Urban Images. Unruly Desires in Film and Architecture

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    Pugin’s Contrasts Rotated

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    Universum Ackerstrasse. Berliner Geschichten

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    Staging the New Berlin

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    (Re)Staging the Art Museum

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    The Monument Upside Down. The City Walls of Istanbul

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    Microplanning. Urban Creative Practices. Sao Paulo

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    The Hierarchies of Cuckoldry and Bankruptcy

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    Martha Wilson Sourcebook

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    The Queer Art of Failure

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    Ganz gut – Quite Good Houses

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    Hummer unter der Bettdecke

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    Saul Bass. A Life in Film & Design

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    Spangbergianism

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    To Do List Calendar 2012

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    Radical Prototypes. Allan Kaprow and the Invention of…

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    101 Things to Learn in Art School

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    In The Space Of A Song. The Uses of Song in Film

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    Under Blue Cup

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    Moderators of Change. Architektur, die hilft

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    Architecture and Violence

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    Anarchitektur

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    The Story of Post-Modernism

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    Creatives in Japan. Keywords to Know

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    Beyond and Before. Progressive Rock since the 1960s

  • Susanne Neubauer

    Paul Thek Reproduced, 1969 - 1977

  • Yvonne Rainer

    Poems

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    How to Design Websites

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    Fanged Noumena. Collected Writings 1987-2007

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    Territorien des Widerstands. Eine politische Kartografie…

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    Community Art: The Politics of Trespassing

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    Tower and Slab. Histories of Global Mass Housing

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    Loop

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    A Thousand Eyes. Media Technology, Law, and Aesthetics

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    Die Medien der Architektur

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    Poster Collection 23. In Series

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    Pop Song Piracy. Disobedient Music Distribution Since 1929

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    The Participation Reader

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    After the Future

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    Double or Nothing

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    It's Lonely in the Modern World

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    Kultur und Kritik (Heft 1, Herbst 2012) POP

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    Sensible Sammlungen. Aus dem anthropologischen Depot

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    Amateur der Weltgeschichte. Historiographische Praktiken im…

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    Touch Me! Das Geheimnis der Oberfläche

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    Visual Storytelling. Inspiring a New Visual Language

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    Capital and Affects. The Politics of the Language Economy

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    Social Works. Performing Art, Supporting Publics

  • Hal Foster

    The Art-Architecture Complex

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    Establishing a Critical Corpus

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  • Lars Spuybroek

    The Sympathy of Things

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    Atta (Semiotext(e) / Intervention)

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    Kunst und Design im erweiterten Feld. It's Not a…

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    Beyond Shelter. Architecture for Crisis

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    Valerio Olgiati 1996-2011

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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
29,00 €