I think workshopology breaks down the barrier between the artist and the public, and you start to imagine together. It’s that space of learning and togetherness that's very special.
I think caring for your body, caring for the body of the planet, is a universal language of love, and that's what I tried to focus on now. As an artist, I felt a duty to reach a more universal perspective. How can we return to the language of love? I think a lot of the violence we see today comes from that place of lovelessness.
science is in the business of making fictions. If it is in the business of making fictions, then why can't we, as non-scientists, also produce our own fictions?
I think the space of collectivity is a medium. You're holding space for people's emotions, for other people's activities, for people's Cosmo-visions, and also vulnerabilities. So I see that as much a medium as painting or sculpting.
I started to look at these landscapes as if they were bodily landscapes. If you can imagine having a wound in your body, all of this toxicity leaking, how would you care for this body as if it's your own body?