Affinities are inclinations, affections, kinships, and connections between different bodies, human and non-human. The Irish essayist Brian Dillon defined affinity as "something a little bit stupid", "a realm of the unthought, unthinkable, something that unkillable by attitudes or arguments". The realm of pre-thought inclination towards something, the realm of love, perhaps you could also call it.
Perhaps we want to use the word affinity to first recall what the German philosopher Walter Benjamin called correspondence. With this concept, Benjamin hinted at the relationship between different elements of the world or its phenomena, which meaningfully connect with each other or create a certain resonance or organic analogy between them. His notion of correspondences contains the idea that certain objects, images, or experiences can be understood in relation to other objects, images, or experiences, whereby we can begin to reveal hidden connections and meanings that would be missed if we focused solely on individual entities before them being placed in one of these relationships.
Summer School of the Academy of Margins 2022
24 Aug – 31 Aug 2022
Topolò/Topolove (Udine/Videm)
… cleaning and useless care, shadows, microbes and fermentation, contamination, bouquets, weather writing, flowing, floating, leaping and cascading, minerals and clay, watery bodies, the personhood of nature, pacifism and feminist activism, field-not-recording, the non-human right to space, landscape dwelling, ecopedagogy, care, weathering, vibrant matter, ecotone, hydrofeminism, kinship, Antropocene …
Introduction
A week of lectures, workshops, explorations of different micro-landscapes surrounding Topolò/Topolove (Udine), readings, walks, conviviality and collective learning about topics related to the environmental humanities and environmental care.
The Summer School of the Academy of Margins is Robida’s culmination of the Academy of Margins, a scattered, whole-year project, a platform of events in Izba (communal space of the Robida Collective in Topolò) and Radio Robida. The main objective of the Academy is to invite relevant contemporary thinkers to a place usually excluded from their maps/travels/conferences and to stimulate the relationship with a younger generation of artists, curators, thinkers and public. The Academy of Margins stimulates the encounter between central theories and marginal places and the relationship between relevant authors and a younger generation that usually reads them and is developing itself through their ideas.
At the Summer School we will deal with the non-, other-than-, more-than-human actors inhabiting the landscape of Topolò/Topolove and through that discovering the possible meanings behind the term care. María Puig de la Bellacasa wrote in her Matters of Care: Speculative Ethics in More Than Human Worlds (2017): “Care work becomes better when it is done again, creating the specificity of a relation through intensified involvement and knowledge. It requires attention and fine-tuning to the temporal rhythms of an “other” and to the specific relations that are being woven together.”
The small caring actions – as weeding an old path crossing the abandoned fields, liberating a tree from ivy, cleaning the stones of a terraced wall – will take place in the mornings and will be accompanied by lectures, readings, conversations among invited guests. Learning moments will happen while care-taking landscape. We’ll try this way to “incorporate in the manner of telling a sense of place” (bell hooks).
Late mornings and afternoons will be dedicated to workshop, guided by different artists and practitioners focusing on the multiple micro-landscapes which surround the village: for each micro-landscape a site-specific workshop will be developed by a chosen artist. In this way the whole variety of small, different environments will be explored and each participant would realise the complex ecology which surrounds the village (and which only from a first sight, wrongly, looks a same wild forest).
The late afternoons and evenings will host lectures and talks, where words, reflections and theories will be at the center of the attention. With the day ending, a softer atmosphere will surround the place.
Approach
The forest, the abandoned terraces, the still resistant small grass fields, the streams of water won’t be used as a scenery, a background of the events and even not only as the site where the observations and reflections take place but these landscapes will be the central presence and focus of care and maintenance of the participants. The summer school will question the exploitative tendency the turistic and cultural system have toward landscape by going beyond the gesture of showing the fragile, abandoned, ruined ecology but will instigate doing – small, minimal, collective actions of care, shared among the participants, the guests, the public. “Caring about” will become “taking care of”, a gesture of responsibility toward the place that hosts the event.
Which is the specificity of curating in the outdoors, in fragile and abandoned ecologies? The specificity lays in the potential (maybe minimal) impact some curatorial approaches can have toward the environment which hosts them.
What if instead of being witnesses to a place, its abandonment and ruination, we are with-nesses? The guests, the public, the temporary and permanent dwellers of Topolò are not just witnesses, observers, of what surrounds them but they are included in the dynamics of the place, in its rhythm, sharing response-abilities and acts of care, being therefore with-nesses.
Location
The Summer School will take place in Topolò/Topolove, a small village of 20 inhabitants at the border between Italy and Slovenia, where Robida works and lives. The events will happen in the abandoned landscape which surrounds the village a Tiers Paysage (Gilles Clément) which hides – it its apparent wildness – many signs of a past human presence.

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Activities
Absurd care w/ Ola Korbańska and Tim Ingold
24th, 25th, 26th, 27th, 30th of August, 7:30—8:30
What if we apply the household cleaning strategies in the landscape of Topolo? What would be the criteria and results in such a place?
Perhaps the unpaid female occupation of cleaning and care — usually focused on houses, family, children, elderly, men, nations, capital — could finally be liberated in an abstract and relaxing gesture of arranging sticks and gray leaves in order. The useless care, absurd care.
The next day we can start again — the landscape will do us a favor by making things messy during the night.
We read a selection of Tim Ingold's texts, made by the author himself:
— Lines in the Landscapes
— Somewhere in Northern Karelia...
— In the shadow of tree being
— The mountaineer’s lament
— Scissors paper stone
— Are we afloat?
Ola Korbańska is a visual artist and writer, based in Berlin, born in Poznań; a graduate of School of Form and Design Academy Eindhoven.
Using various media such as installation or written text (recently textile and words), she explores the nature of objects in the context of changeability and social perception.
Her works were exhibited around Europe at various design and art shows, and texts featured in numerous publications.
Ola is always up for art collaborations, writing short stories, protests, tea-drinking, and some lols.
www.olakorbanska.com / @olakorbanska
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"È estate, è notte, la luna è d’argento, lo spazio si allarga nel silenzio..."
Collecting Shadows by Francesca Zoboli w/ Robida
25th of August, 22:00—00:00
It is summer, it is night, the moon is silver, the space expands in silence.
There is a drawing on the ground between herbs and leaves.
It is already there, we just have to pick it up.
The workshop that will take place between paths and woods, at night.
We will collect the shadows of plants and trees on large sheets.
We will do this using only white paper and black color.
Subsequently all the works will give rise to a new collective vision of the forest.
Francesca Zoboli graduated in painting at the Brera Academy of Fine Arts.
Parallel to her painting activity, she deals with interior decoration, designing and carrying out interventions in public and private spaces, such as the one commissioned by the designer Antonio Marras, created for the Kenzo concept store in Paris.
These two activities continually border on one another and feed each other. This is how her large-sized collages are born, always made on poor paper, painted with special techniques and using materials such as wax and inks, pigments.
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Bouquet Immaginifico w/ Marta Olivieri & Roberta Mansueto
25th, 26th, 27th of August, 8:30—9:00; and 27th of August, 12:00—12:30
Within the research framework of bocche sorelle, Marta Olivieri and Roberta Mansueto are developing an apparatus of readings and practices, which in text and voice first and in practice and perception later, constitute the articulation of the languages and relationships of sense, generating spontaneous mixes of knowledges coming from different theoretical, literary, social and geographical contexts.
The group of bocche sorelle was born from the non-authorial will, to create a dynamic group of artists, curators and theorists who put together artistic practice, natural-cultural knowledge, genres and sisterhood, making a new ecological experience of the use of voice.
“Contamination as a form of collaboration” becomes the central node of the textual research of this b.i .: a bouquet is a collection of fresh flowers that will soon wither - but we don't want flowers! - thus it is transformed into an imaginative collection of texts from different voices which collects these sounds, words, thoughts and theories, and find an opportunity to contribute to a reflected collaboration (which returns to who acts) of the participants.
Marta Olivieri is an author and a performer. Her artistic work wants to question the infiltrations that move a body. Writings, sounds, temperatures and asphalt are the areas of her research.
The body moves between the visible and the invisible and attempts a continuous happening on the sides of the structure it inhabits.
Roberta Mansueto is an independent curator and activist in the conservation of plant biodiversity.
In 2014 she was the co-founder of Tile project space (Milan) space for research and promotion of contemporary art and since 2018 she is the founder of takecare, a project that investigates the practice of writing in contemporary art, activating the text between performative research and independent publishing.
Since 2021 she is the co-founder of Salgemma, a project rooted in Puglia with the aim of enhancing and promoting the context of artistic research, through a platform of communication services, training and networking practices.
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Teaming With Microbes w/ Philipp Kolmann
25th of August, 10:00—12:00, 14:00—16:00, 21:00—22:00: talk titled From spirit to Spirit w/ Philipp Kolmann, René Nissen & Aljaž Škrlep
26th of August, 11:00—12:30
During a three-part workshop we will team up with microbes, together we will transform grains, fruits and local botanicals into embodied data - helping us to better understand our close and unmistakable dependence with our symbionts.
Our goal is to share and strengthen the identity of place and a life sustaining bond between multiple species - in that quest we will rely on flavour and scent being our leading senses.
In the course of three moments, divided over three days we will learn how to capture local yeast and bacteria communities, unlock flavours and nutrients, fizz up and comfort our bellies.
On our final day, tasting collaborative efforts and uncovering a long awaited treasure that has been put under the soils of Topolò a year ago. Awaiting to be released and shared amongst all!
Philipp Kolmann is an Austrian designer based in the Netherlands. His work is grounded on an expanded notion of terroir understood as a site-specific composition of symbiotic relationships between people and land that shape unique, locally-rooted identities in the form of flavour and scent.

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Weather Writing after Astrida Neimanis w/ Nada Schroer
During the summer school we’ll experiment with different iterations of writing exercises that are inspired by Astrida Neimanis’ method of weather writing. In the course of several days we’ll explore how to attune our human bodies to the weather-world and climatic natures through different modalities of writing collaboratively with and through the environment and other co-species.
Nada Rosa Schroer studied Cultural Studies at the University of Leipzig, Staging the Arts and Media at the University of Hildesheim and Cultures of the Curatorial at the Academy of Visual Arts in Leipzig.
With a preference for feminist science fiction narratives and posthuman philosophy, she focuses on curatorial and artistic practices that address the ecological, social and psychological consequences of the colonial capitalocene. Starting from an ecofeminist perspective, she seeks radical proposals to transform curation, research, and institutional practices under climate emergency.
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On Electric Brine and On Elusive Earths w/ Jennifer Teets & Lorenzo Cirrincione
26th of August, 10:00—11:00
27th of August, 16:00—18:00
On Electric Brine
Flowing, seeping, leaking, cascading, shaping. Electric Brine is a volume of poetry and critical essays by women voices from diverse fields such as literature, geography, media studies, history of life sciences, sociology, and poetics of science and fiction, each of them central to the independent curatorial research entity The World in Which We Occur (TWWWO, 2014-ongoing) and its associated online study group Matter in Flux. Conceived as an anthology and a register, it serves as a testimony to the initiative’s long-standing work of creative adaptation and ecological inquiry through a quest to situate a vision of material politics through the lens of six punctuated pieces on flow and fluids. The literary and scientific fabulations found in these pages speak of the conjunction of lived embodiment, the materialized quality of language, and the ability to trigger political imagination through reading, writing and witnessing. Each of these strands polyperform under TWWWO, for they can be traced, retroactively, to the themes present in the live event series, to Matter in Flux’s private study sessions, to the initiative’s collective writing work presented in public venues and publications. The book features contributions by Dionne Brand, Barbara Orland, Sophie Lewis, Esther Leslie, Hannah Landecker and Lisa Robertson. Published by Archive Books, Berlin. Electric Brine is edited by Jennifer Teets and co-edited by Elise Hunchuck and Margarida Mendes. All visuals have been designed by Sophie Keij, Atelier Brenda.
This talk situates Electric Brine within a history of self-led curatorial entities and collectives, exposing their inner mechanisms and methodologies.
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On Elusive Earths
This talk looks at the role of minerals and clay particles in human health via the work of Elusive Earths, a long term artistic inquiry and exhibition proposal-cum-dialogue between American curator/writer Jennifer Teets and French artist/philosopher Lorenzo Cirrincione. Taking the form of a “clay odyssey,” this talk will feature material from their upcoming book which is both an experimental travel record and a visual monograph. It associates earthly ways of making, knowing, and living, with the idea that the properties of natural materials are not attributes, but histories. How is earth consumption embedded in various levels of cultural forces both of the past and of today? How do forgotten earth trade stories challenge us to explore the circulation and entanglement between peoples, substances and places? In this talk, like the book, these questions are interwoven to form a narrative of a cottage industry under radical transformation.
Jennifer Teets is an American curator and writer based in Paris, working at the intersection of science studies, literature, and performance. She is a graduate of SPEAP (Sciences Po Experimentation in Arts and Politics, directed by Bruno Latour), SciencesPo, Paris 2014. Within her work, she addresses the roles of consumption and contamination as an embodiment of thought which then performs, spores, proliferates. She is interested in the “backstory” of matter, its conditioning as both ‘natural’ and ‘cultural’ vis-á-vis materials such as milk and cheese (post trauma goat milk production), terra sigillata (sealed medicinal earth), and mud.
Lorenzo Cirrincione is a philosopher, curator, and artist living and working in Paris. He received a PhD in the history of science at the Université de Poitiers in 2015. His writing expands on how early modern scientific collections challenge us, stretching beyond ideas of artistic privilege and appropriation. He currently researches the spread of antique medicinal knowledge throughout the commercial world; the scholarly initiatives that long animated the Republic of Letters. As an artist, his work investigates new ways of exhibiting and performing knowledge, mirroring the social and cultural games in the rich history of trade relations and cultural transfers.
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Floating with the stream w/ Zakole grupa
Eager to take off our gumboots necessary to move around Zakole Wawerskie wetland (our base in Warsaw) and to let our feet cool off in the clear waters of the mountain stream that runs near Topolo, we are looking into ways of understanding and celebrating its watery body. Curious about its biolife, its spring and its mouth, sounds from above and below the surface, its changing mood and force of the current, the way it mingles with environment all around and how circumstances such as drought change its being. We are setting ourselves up for a week long exploration where we will test out how the embodied methods we usually employ, translate to new circumstances – and, hopefully, will come up with new ones, hinted by the river itself.
What do we encounter along the continuous trough of the stream which escapes the linear thinking with all its different habitats and processes? We plan to carry on a daily practice of being at the stream, in specific times of the day, at concrete spots. While inviting the participants to walk with us we’ll exercise deep listening to the water environments and try later on to accompany them with sounds of our presence by/ in the water.
Beyond observation alone we are thinking about forms of gathering and celebration by accepting the river's generous invitation for our curious yet gentle presence. How to cherish and celebrate parts of the landscape without being intrusive – or careful to the point where it becomes detached and distanced?
Exploring this ceremonial value of the liquid body we’ll gather and feast by stone soup logic, maybe trying to collectively add to the river old stories and imaginings.
Zakole is a project rooted in a wetland located near the heart of Warsaw. The Zakole Wawerskie (Wawer Meander) area consists of mostly inaccessible marsh and vast meadows. Its inhabitants are a variety of creatures: beavers, birds, frogs, mosquitoes, alders, reeds, grasses, and people. Our goal is to explore Zakole Wawerskie, its inhabitants and visitors, and to identify and map its various meanings. Together with our collaborators from the fields of science, arts, philosophy, activism and policymaking we search for ways of telling the stories of such areas. By using different methods (empirical, embodied) of experiencing the wetland our aim is also to foreground the perspective of the creatures forming its complex ecosystems. We find it crucial to highlight the significance of similar sites in cities, primarily for the reasons of biodiversity and climate, while focussing on the complexity of relations and interests of various actors.
www.zakole.pl/en

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From Water to Nature: The Personhood of Nature w/ Marjetica Potrč
27th of August, 18:00—20:00
The vote for water rights during referendum in Slovenia last year pointed to a shift in contemporary culture, with owners becoming caretakers of water. In the eyes of a caretaker, a river is not an object but a subject. As a subject, it will eventually have its rights recognized by the law, which, no longer human-centred, will acknowledge the agency of nature. For the 23rd Sydney Biennale (2022) Marjetica collaborated with Wiradjuri elder Ray Woods, an activist and caretaker of the Lachlan River in New South Wales in Australia. Their common work focused on the Rights of Nature contributed to stopping construction on Wynagala Dam which would have deprived Lachlan River of water. We will look into Ray Woods's knowledge and practices which are similar to today's environmentalists stand. A new alliance between indigenous people and environmentalists ensures a more resilient future for all of us.
Marjetica Potrč is an artist and architect based in Ljubljana, Slovenia. Potrč’s practice includes drawing series, architectural case studies and public art projects. Her on-site projects are characterised by participatory design and a concern with sustainable solutions. These projects often centre around infrastructure and resources such as water and soil. Her work emphasises individual and community empowerment, problem-solving tools, and strategies for the future that transcend neoliberal agreement and testify to the failures of modernism.
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Projection of the film Landscapes of Resistence (2021, 96') w/ Marta Popivoda & Ana Vujanović
29th of August, 21:00—23:00
The landscape gains a voice when elderly Sonja talks about being in the anti-fascist resistance and escaping from Auschwitz.
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The Dark Forest (2021, 33') w/ Aljaž Škrlep
29th of August, 23:00—23:30
»They’re wild and impenetrable, they’re black and rust-red, debauched, worldly, teeming with life, diametrical, dissipated, cruel, passionate and lovable, without yesterday or tomorrow. [...] The forests gobble up the horizon.«
— Max Ernst
The live-reading video-performance The Dark Forest tries to connects forests, philosophy and dark art, equipped with a montage of shots of forests from various horror and other films. By interweaving the two mediums, it attempts to uniquely examine and interrogate the important role that the forest plays in this neglected film genre, while at the same time situating itself within the wider critical plant studies field of research that examines questions related to plants and attempts to offer an answer to the question: Can humankind learn anything from plants and their eco-systems? A lot. But you'll probably not going to like it.
Aljaž Škrlep studied philosophy at the University of Ljubljana and likes to write. He is still deciding if his love for life and children is stronger than his inborn pessimism and anti-natalism. He is inspired by obscure and commercial horror films, neglected philosophers, and more or less dogmatic metaphysics.
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Alle radici dell’ecofemminismo. Un percorso bibliografico-esperienziale w/ Francesca Casafina & Bruna Bianchi
29th of August, 11:00—12:30: incontro introduttivo
30th of August, 10:00—12:00: laboratorio
L’incontro Alle radici dell’ecofemminismo. Un percorso bibliografico-esperienziale si propone di introdurre ai temi e alle pratiche dell’ecofemminismo. Nell’incontro di lunedì 29 agosto verranno fornite alcune coordinate essenziali per comprendere cos’è l’ecofemminismo, come nasce e cosa significa oggi. Bruna Bianchi e Francesca Casafina, curatrici del volume Oltre i confini. Ecologia e pacifismo nella riflessione e nell’attivismo femminista (Biblion Edizioni 2021), offriranno spunti utili per una discussione/confronto intorno al tema, che proseguirà con il laboratorio di martedì 30 agosto, tenuto da Bruna Bianchi, nel quale verrà offerto un percorso di letture attraverso le principali fasi storiche dell’ecofemminismo – a partire dalle lotte contro il nucleare negli anni ottanta –, i suoi concetti chiave e la sua interpretazione del nodo femminismo-ecologismo-pacifismo.
Bruna Bianchi ha insegnato Storia delle donne e questioni di genere e Storia del pensiero politico contemporaneo all’Università Ca’ Foscari di Venezia. Si occupa di grande guerra e pensiero pacifista femminista in Europa e negli Stati Uniti. Fa parte dell’Historial de la Grnade Guerre (Péronne) ed è socia onoraria di WILPF Italia. Dal 2004 è condirettrice della rivista telematica “DEP. Deportate, esuli, profughe”.
Francesca Casafina è Dottore di ricerca in Scienze politiche presso l’Università degli Studi Roma Tre. Dal 2015 fa parte del comitato di redazione della rivista telematica “DEP. Deportate, esuli, profughe” ed è socia della Società Italiana delle Storiche e della Asociasión de Historiadores Latinoamericanistas Europeos. I suoi temi di ricerca riguardano la storia dell’America latina contemporanea e gli studi di genere.
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Projection of the film Von Bienen und Blumen (2018, 96') w/ Lola Randl
30th of August, 21:00—23:00
The Birds and the Bees explores the soul seeking adventure of a family moving from Berlin to the countryside looking for the simple life and finding questions and answers on how we define work, love and family nowadays.
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Field-Not-Recording Workshop w/ Attila Faravelli
30th and 31st of August, 14:00—18:00
We will explore listening to a non-human environment through the microphones, in real time and without recording.
In the context of field recording, recorders and microphones are often considered complementary, and yet the former can’t be used alone whereas the latter can; microphones afford real time listening but they are not a substitute for our hearing, they allow us to perceive reality in their own peculiar way. At the same time, as pretty much any field recordist can testify, listening to reality through microphones quite strangely informs the way that we listen to reality without them. Before even being bothered by the urge to record, we probably should appreciate the ability that the microphone, a tool born to fix the flow of sound into a recording, has to expose the dizzying aural complexity of reality.
Attila Faravelli is an Italian sound artist and electro-acoustic musician. Within his practice - which encompasses field recording, performances, workshops and design - he explores the material involvement with the world around us. His work has been featured in various festivals and institutions in Europe, USA, China and South Korea.
He has collaborated with, among others, Armin Linke, Rossella Biscotti, Riccardo Giacconi, Kamal Aljafari, Gürcan Keltek, Teatro Valdoca and Mariangela Gualtieri.
He is part of the sound research collective Standards in Milan.
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Summer School of the Academy of Margins is financed by Regione Friuli Venezia Giulia and co-financed by Urad Vlade republike Slovenije za Slovence v zamejstvu in po svetu.








































Glossary
>>- the action of cultivating land, or the state of being cultivated.
- the process of trying to acquire or develop a quality or skill.
Affinity
Be-longing
“Belonging is where you long to belong, whom you want to nestle beside at the end of the day, who you call when you are in pain, or who accompanies you in ritual–in signifying practices that give life meaning. (...) The command is to “be” “longing”, not to be still, or be quiet, but to be longing. This being is, of course, a command to which we are already responding. (...) If the assumption of the individual is foundational to colonial modernity, my hope is that the assumption of belonging is constitutive of the decolonial imaginary.” → from Be-Longing: Towards a Feminist Politics of Relation by Aimee Carillo Rowe
see also Politics of Relation and Positionality
Thanks to Sophie Mak-Schram for having introduced this text to us!
written in 2023
Vida RucliBlue carpet
It is only allowed to walk on it without shoes and this rule is carefully respected by all. This stunning cobalt carpet, with amazingly long, soft bristles (almost like french fries) is a sanctity for understandable reasons. It is a real blessing to come back home from Topolo, and find little blue pieces felted into white, knitted socks — tiny memories of soft, blue walks.
Written in 2022
Ola KorbańskaBordering
“For some a wall is a defence, for others an insult, and for others a means to spray graffiti on. And a line in the sand is not always a limit, as well as a border is not always a line in the sand. A line is geometry, a border is a power interpretation. What is important to the study of the ontology of borders on our world is not the item of the border per se, but the dynamic objectification process of the border; the power practices attached to a border that construct a spatial effect and which give a demarcation in space its meaning and influence. The border makes and is made. Hence, also in this respect indeed, a border is a verb. So, rather than a border we should speak of bordering.” (Hank van Houtum, The Janus-Face)
The border, like the face of Janus, simultaneously looks in two opposite directions: The border is necessarily a lie that limits, colonizes ontologically free and undivided territory. At the same time, it is a lie that is the truth. In the most basic sense, the border represents the sacred desire for eternal truth, which wants to cancel out the constant changeability of things. On the other hand, it is also the other way around: The border makes it possible to understand that precise ontological freedom and makes it an object of desire. How could you possibly desire something that is not the Other? The border is made and it makes.
written in 2023
Aljaž ŠkrlepBoundaries (to honour them)
"A hooded seal gets everything they need to travel the world from only four days of nursing. No one knows how the Bikal seal ended up in a freshwater lake. And Amazon dolphins in captivity may be dying from sleep deprivation. What are boundaries that we choose and do not choose? What are distances that we choose and do not choose? What are the distances we need and what are the walls that will isolate and destroy us? How can we discern the differences between generative boundaries and destructive borders? Are we ready to move towards nourishing forms of adaptation?"
→ from Alexis Pauline Gumbs, “Undrowned”. In: Black Feminist Lessons from Marine Mammals. AK Press, 2020.
written in 2023
Rosario TaleviBuzzing Spirit
These lines that always captivated me were written by the Austrian author Gerhard Roth. In his essay On Bees (1989), he speaks about the unity of the hive: the individual perceptions and thoughts as part of a larger whole, where the individual bees come together to form a kind of "buzzing spirit", the so-called "Bien" (German). "The "Bien" is the organism composed of all bees of a colony. It has no definite appearance ... It is an unusual animal, dancing and pulsating within itself, made up of freely moving body cells, and belonging to the liquid or gaseous state of aggregation rather than the solid." His way of describing the superorganism has been with me ever since, as the so-called buzzing spirit. To me it illuminates my relationship with bees, something that carries me throughout the year. Without touching them, I am touched by them. It is not the physical proximity that binds me, but the knowledge that the hives are in my care. Paradoxically, any intervention might be one too many as every intervention leads to more effort on the part of the hive because the Bien 'knows' how to survive and it is then that the hive is the most beautiful to observe, because it shows itself in its true form. Indeed it is not about physical care and interventions, but it is about consciousness and care that lies way beyond.
Written in 2023
Erika MayrCa(r)r(y)ing
caring-carrying-maintaining
Juxtaposition of words thought during a thirteen day walk where what you carry is really what you care and need. Along the path everything becomes simple and the attention is directed to very elementary needs. Every time we move, for short or big periods, packing becomes a moment of visualising possible future needs in relation to what we care about having with us and what we are planning to live.
In the moment of sharing knowledge or else, we always consider what we care about, therefore what we always carry with us. In doing so we contribute to the maintenance (physical or theoretical) of something.
written in 2023
Franca LucchittaCalendar
Now, then, before—time is a dimension we live in and a system of reference where to act, remember action and imagine others. We keep track of time. The measurement indicates the duration and the when, the from-when-to-when. A clock tells the time. The same temporal succession of states is constantly repeated. The repetition is cyclical. Each period has the same time duration.
We live in an environment characterised by natural changes (natural clock of the alternation of day and night, etc.) that we observed, understood and classified. In relation to these changes we organised our activities and it is necessary to find a structure where to keep track of these natural shifts and our actions, and to combine them.
A calendar could be defined as “a system by which time is divided into fixed periods, showing the beginning and end of a year” or as "table showing divisions of the year". A calendar also has the qualities of connecting different events and moments of a specific time frame, to inform one another, to see, plan and prepare ‘beforehand’. The calendar could be a tool to ‘bring the cycle together’, to assemble the events and seasons of a year as a whole, to give insight, access and overview.
Etymologically speaking the term comes from the latin verb calare "to announce solemnly, to call out," as the priests did in proclaiming the new moon that marked the calends. Meanwhile the root of calare comes from Proto-Indo-European *kele- (2) "to shout." The format of a calendar could therefore be seen as a call to action, an invitation to participate. Calendar address seasons which, with the influence of the climate crisis, are not stable according to months and days. Wolf-Dieter Storl suggests using a phenological calendar, which is not bound to dates and months such as astronomical calendars are, but where the beginning of a season is introduced by specific stages of development of plants (such as the flowering of dandelion), which can shift from year to year. The phenological seasons are defined in pre-, first- and late spring, early-, high- and late summer, early-, full- and late autumn and winterly rest.
Written in 2021
Franca LucchittaCare
“Care work becomes better when it is done again, creating the specificity of a relation through intensified involvement and knowledge. It requires attention and fine-tuning to the temporal rhythms of an “other” and to the specific relations that are being woven together.”
→ from Matters of Care: Speculative Ethics in More Than Human Worlds by María Puig de la Bellacasa
Written in 2021
Vida RucliCats
Topolò is mostly inhabited by female cats. Olá calls it a matriarchal village. Add to this the fact that each of us has a cat. A female one, of course. Between fights and games, they swap houses, glossing over the concept of private property. And we like this.
In the village, every inhabitant or visitor has met one of our cats, who, moved by this freedom, have crossed the threshold of domestic walls to meet people and explore other people's places and homes.
Everyone in the village, in one way or another, takes care of them, as if they were a little bit their own, too.
Dora has Marfa, the oldest of them all.
Elena has Tit with a severed tail and who had an identity crisis (from Tito it turned out to be Tita, but when in doubt, we leave her as Tit)
Vida has the young Pičič/Picig/Peachaech (multilingual).
And then there is Selena's latest arrival, Mačka, long-haired and three-coloured.
Written in 2022
Elena RucliColour rule
The first time is a gamble, a plunge. You might get lucky, who knows. From the second onwards, you will be careful (without really realising it), to choose accurately the colour of what you take with you to Topolò. You will act so influenced by a chromatic resonance that you will inevitably have perceived as you move through the village, from one house to another, one room to another. You will begin to understand that colours have a different value from the one you are used to giving them, they are not random attributes, they speak and tell of what would be impossible to put into words. If you pay attention you will learn to recognise the clues that colours suggest, you will know who passed by, who left that shirt on the chair, who set the table, who picked the flowers. The most experienced can recognise at first glance who is a local and who is passing by, just by deciphering their chromatic essence. It’s the silent rule of colours.
Written in 2022
Laura Savinacomp(h)osting
Comp(h)osting. Interlacing hosting and composting – it’s about temporality, let encounters, conversations, events sediment, stay, be in contact with other remains, become a meshwork of elements which decompose to create humus to host again. Does this relation about composting and hosting speak only about finding a time for letting meetings, conversations, events (all things hosted) deposit – does it only speak of a slower temporality, of a time dedicated to waiting for the transformation of the material? To compost also means to accumulate in a place… so it’s at the same time about a slower time and about a shared place.
Comp(h)osting. Relating the host to the transformative essence of the compost. Who has the right to host? What is left after we have hosted (events, people, collective moments)? What is the aftercare these remains need?
written in 2023
Vida RucliConspiring
Up at the top of the bell tower removed from the official proceedings, free to drink and talk, it conjured up other rebellious scenes of conversation in taverns, or at fireplaces, washrooms, and cafes where people would meet to ponder their yesterdays and tomorrows or conspire against the status quo. The word conspire, I have since found out, derives from the latin con (together with) and spirare (to breathe) to conspire then is to breathe together. What I find interesting about this shared air in the context of bell ringing and broadcasting is that you are also sharing an acoustic air. What is created in that intimate space is then expanded to include all that are in earshot of the bells or the radio signal. A recreation of that shared air, an expanded belonging through sound.
→ from A Space to Conspire by Jack Bardwell, published in Robida 9
written in 2023
Jack BardwellContinuity
Historical places that carry memories within them are living entities that can grow and adapt to changes without completely losing their character. The most important criterion that remains is the suitability of integrating new interventions into the existing space, rather than conforming to our expectations of how newly constructed buildings should look at a given time. Continuity implies uninterrupted connection and suggests the present and the future in which the identity of the space continues, evolves, and is continually reexamined.
Indeed, any response to a place is specific and requires a thorough understanding of the context and sensitivity when intervening in it. Respecting heritage and operating harmoniously within a space with a recognizable language is a responsibility that demands the ability to listen and question.
written in 2023
Janja ŠušnjarConviviality
In the text The Convivial Table, Kelly Donati takes into consideration the difference between the notions of generosity and conviviality. While the first refers to an “individual altruistic virtue” and create an unequal relation of privilege and disadvantage, or gesture of an active giver and passive receiver, the second is “a hospitable stance of openness to difference, responsibility and receptiveness to the needs of others rather than one based on relations of benefactors and recipients”.
Conviviality (con- meaning “with” or “together” and vivere meaning “to live”)—as Donati says—”attends fundamentally to the question of how we live together”. The ‘we’ needs to look beyond the human and consider our interaction with other species—multispecies relations as Donna Haraway conceptualized in her work When Species Meet. How can we reshape the material and conceptual ways in which we share the world with others?
Written in 2021
Franca LucchittaDai
ma dai Vidaaa (low voice, with prolonged last syllable of the name), dai Ali (accompanied with a gesture of hands connected similarly to amen style, going back and forth), dai, dai (short and friendly, and encouragement while mixing dense polenta), daaaaai, incredibile! (said in certain cheerful disbelief, as a reaction to gossip).
Written in 2022
Ola KorbańskaDwelling exercise
Exercise is a form of play and play is one of the essential forms of dwelling.
Try and Imagine, Describe, Work out the itinerary, Start at the end, Observe, Observe with a concern, Apply yourself, Note down what you can see, Walk backwards, Pick something from the floor, Turn it around, Note the absence, Count, Detect a rhythm, Read what’s written, Read backwards, Decipher, Wait, Carry on … “Until the scene becomes improbable, until you have the impression, for the briefest of moments, that you are in a strange town or, better still, until you can no longer understand what is happening or is not happening, until the whole place becomes strange, and you no longer even know that this is what is called a town, a street, buildings, pavements.” (Georges Perec, Species of Spaces)
Written in 2022
Janja ŠušnjarFace/Surface
“In experiential terms, the abstract philosophical distinction between subjects and objects is readily understandable when it is translated into the difference between faces and surfaces. A face individuates whoever has it, rendering this being, precisely, a who. Whether smooth or rugged, a surface is the anonymous outer layer of material existence, delimited in its finitude by edges, beyond which this particular surface ends.
Just as the subject-object distinction is not set in stone and has, in fact, recently undergone a thorough questioning and critique, so its palpably experiential corollary is far from secure. Faces are actually made of living surfaces—of skin, above all, but also the protrusions or invaginations of sense organs, without which a face does not open itself to the world and the world remains closed to a face. And, in their uniqueness, in the unrepeatable interplay of their edges, clashing and overlapping, surfaces are not entirely anonymous; instead, they are facialized, beyond the symbolic machinery of metaphor or allegorical connotations. Do houses have faces, with their windows and doors playing the role of their sense organs? Does a mountain have a face, its slopes uniquely bedecked with lush forests and, on a more limited scale, peppered with the white of house walls? Do flowers and trees have faces, too?”
→ from Michael Marder, The Faces and Surfaces of Robida
written in 2023
Michael MarderFear of periphery
The fear of being peripheral, of remaining out, is a feeling and concept that I feel quite strongly while living and working here in Topolove. Working with contemporary culture on the margins, in a small village, puts you always in relation to the city, to the center, to which you always look for validation. Fear of periphery speaks about the need of being in contact with the urbanity and of the power relation that still exists between culture at the center and at the margins. Fear of periphery is about claiming power and also about emancipation. It portrays a need of being connected to transformation (which is usually urban). It also reflects on what is expected from the peripheries (a certain type of works, connected to crafts, ancient knowledge, traditions) and on how to go beyond these expectations.
Written in 2022
Vida RucliGentleness
“Gentleness is primarily an intelligence, one that carries life, that saves and enhances it. Because it demonstrates a relationship to the world that sublimates astonishment, possible violence, capture and pure compliance out of fear, it may alter everything and every being. It is an understanding of the relationship with the other, and tenderness is the epitome of this relationship.”
→ from Power of Gentleness. Meditations on the Risk of Living by Anne Dufourmantelle
written in 2023
Sasha van AalstGossip
When traveling and visiting friends, it is always nice to bring a gift. Whether it's a bottle of wine or a cake, a book or a postcard, “knocking with your feet” (as we say in Rome when someone shows up at an invitation with something small to share, a.k.a. a “pensierino”) is always greatly appreciated. Now, if you happen to be passing through Topolò whether it is for a short walk or a longer stay, perhaps to study or work, know that no gift is more welcome to the Robide than gossip. “Gossip is God” is a phrase you have heard for sure or will certainly hear if you begin to become familiar with this place and especially its female inhabitants (and their friends and friends of friends and so on..). Gossip beats everything else, gossip comes before and above everything else: it is like a sacred object that needs no introductions or justifications, it annihilates the formalisms of social relations, it overrides good manners and the “unwritten rules” of friendship, it goes beyond any shared and recognized code of behavior. That’s it: Gossip is God.
Fascinated by this concept and now inexorably enveloped by its coils, one day I wanted to look up what the origin of this curious word was. For me, being Italian, it is a bizarre yet common term that does not refer to anything intuitively relatable to its meaning. So I typed the magic word into Google and was amazed. The word “gossip” is actually connected with the word “God”:
Old English godsibb “sponsor, godparents”, from God + sibb “a relative” (siblings). The sense was extended in Middle English to “a familiar acquaintance, a close friend, a neighbour”, thus a person with whom one gossips (c. 1300), especially to women friends invited to attend a birth. Later to “anyone who engages in familiar or idle gossip” (1560s).
But not only that, and here's the kicker:
The term godsibb is often found used with the feminine meaning, godmother, “madrina”. The reason may lie in female solidarity, born at a time when women were completely excluded from public life. Gossip, then, only among themselves, was a clear sign of reaction to male domination, a way to carve out a space in which women's opinion had value. Gossip is described by some as having connotations of warmth, intimacy and bonding. Suddenly this word acquires a new seductive meaning, a political one. It sounds like the name of the first spontaneous, extremely intimate and personal form of feminist struggle. I don't know about you, but for me now, more than ever, Gossip is God.
written in 2023
Laura SavinaGrounded
“How to be grounded without getting stuck in the mud of personal experience? I guess I am trying to re-articulate ‘grounded’ as a ‘thinking-and-making-with’. (...) To be grounded means to be porous to remote impressions, to trust the touching done by (other-than-human) others.”
→ Femke Snelting in Making Matters by Janneke Wesseling & Florian Cramer (eds.)
Written in 2022
Vida RucliGuest
Following Jacques Derrida’s text Of Hospitality (1997), hospitality (if not unconditional) implies a power to host and hence involves claims to property, ownership and a form of self-identity. The opposition between who is a host and who a guest, therefore, speaks of a relation of power.
For this reason when possible we try to avoid this duality of hosts vs. guests, speaking rather of temporary and permanent dwellers or referring to guests as co-dweller. Making the relation between temporary and permanent inhabitants reciprocal and sharing with guests responsibilities the place demands is a way of overcoming this binarity – of making hosts less hosts and guests less guests. (Furthermore, the fact that in Italian the host and the guest are called with the same word – ospite – helps to go beyond this dualism).
See also Conviviality
Written in 2021
Vida RucliHospitality
Building a relationship between two people, in a space and a time: a door always open, a warm cake in the morning or a glass of wine to share in a summer evening. Opening your private dimension to someone else, bringing a fragment of your home in a stranger one, becoming part of its story and collecting something to carry with you. A reciprocal exchange of care, gossip and good food.
See also Guest
Written in 2022
Dora CicconeHyperlocal
As defined in the Oxford Dictionary, "hyperlocal" is an adjective that relates to or focuses on matters concerning a small community or a specific geographical area.
Hyperlocal activity is not merely about fitting in; it's an active response to the unique attributes of a place, enabling its improvement, regeneration, and long-term resilience.
Hyperlocal activity involves a deep sense of belonging to a particular place and community. This connection is not limited to those who permanently reside in the area; it extends to individuals who have a strong affection for it.
written in 2023
Janja ŠušnjarIntense proximity
Intense proximity is a term coined by Okwui Enwezor which we use to refer to the relation we strive to stimulate between the temporary dwellers and the site where they are immersed into, intending it not only as a physical environment but also as a situation, an event, a set of relations among people and other inhabitants of the place.
Written in 2021
Vida RucliInterspecies Space
“What if the social, economic, and political contradictions spawned in the modern city were to be flipped? What if plants and non-human animals were understood as city dwellers and spatial producers, giving us the opportunity to understand and design living spaces for a wide range of users beyond pure exploitation, speculation, and utilitarianism? Could the complex structure of the city as an inter-species space open up new modes of subjectivation, kinship, and solidarity? Could it produce and promote a concept of politics and subjectivity beyond neoliberal individualism?”
→ Marion von Osten, “Swooping in and out of the tiniest niches on the façade” in Making Futures, 2022
written in 2023
Rosario TaleviIntimate necessity
Intimate necessity is a word that I frequently use to refer to the modality of thinking/doing of Robida. I use this term to explain that whatever we do is not driven by a concrete, real, detached-from-us necessity of the place/situation we are immersed in (in our case, the village of Topolò), it is not necessarily an answer to those urgent questions that the place opens. The adjective “intimate” refers to the personal dimension that we recognize in these needs of the place. It is a way to underline that, with our practice, we cannot bear on our shoulders all the urges that surround us but we chose those which have an intimate resonance for us. This gives us the possibility of finding our personal meaning for what we do, avoiding the risk of operating just to solve things, without building a personal attachment to these urgencies.
Written in 2021
Vida RucliIrrigation
"Quando c'è acqua c’è vita" (Graziano 2022)
Irrigation is the agricultural process of applying controlled amounts of water to land to assist in the production of crops, as well as to grow landscape plants and lawns, where it may be known as watering.
Written in 2022
Studio WildIzba
The izba is in Topolove the room of conviviality. It is the clean room of the house, heated by the peč, the old stove made of majolica tiles, upon which children and elders used to nap, the room where tales were told and where guests felt welcome. Its opposite is the črna kuhinja, the black kitchen with the fireplace and no chimney. Inspired by the convivial inner meaning of this word, we named the new collective space of hospitality of Topolove Izba.
Written in 2021
RobidaJoyful Administration
How can we bridge the separation of one kind of work(er) – administrative, bureaucratic – from another – the creative or the academic? It is fundamental to understand these as two interconnected parts of every cultural endeavour. Joyful administration is a term I coined when confronted with the huge amount of administrative work behind my projects. It was an attempt to practice with joy the invisible side of cultural work and to propose that what defines the practice are these daily acts! To challenge and disrupt bureaucratic traps with radical imagination.
Written in 2023
Rosario TaleviKozolec
The word is translated into english as hayrack but we like to use the original Slovene word since the english translation is quite generic, indicating a structure where to hang to dry hay. The kozolec in Topolove, in its most complex shape, is an architecture standing on four or six pillars made of stone, covered by a roof, defined as a “monument to farmers culture”. The pillars are connected by wooden racks where hay, buckwheat or wheat was dried: these racks were filled up in summer and slowly emptied until winter. The kozolec is therefore an architecture showing in its filled or empty structure the passage of season, the cyclicity of time. A calendar in the shape of a house or a temple.
Written in 2022
Vida RucliKuota (sl)
KUOTA (sl)/ CARBONAIA (it): "Era quasi mattina quando i due sono arrivati allo spiazzo d'una carbonaia e l'omone ha detto: Qui possiamo far tappa. Pin s'è sdraiato sul terreno fuligginoso e come in un sogno ha visto l'omone coprirlo con la sua mantellina, poi andare e venire con dei legni, spaccarli, e accendere il fuoco." → Il sentiero dei nidi di ragno by Italo Calvino, 1947
Written in 2022
Studio WildLandguage
“I write about Slovene as a sharp terrain, a landguage, perhaps. Sharp sounds, sounds I had to climb on, to cling onto, many other fragments where soil reverberates like a spell, a spillage, a geography of foreign noise”, writes Giorgia Maurovich in her article Soil Searching, written for Robida 9. Landguage reminds me of the dearest sentence by bell hooks who said “I have been working to change the way I speak and write, to incorporate in the manner of telling a sense of place, of not just who I am in the present but where I am coming from, the multiple voices within me” (from Choosing the Margins as A Space of Radical Openness, bell hooks, 1989).
See also Wild Tongues
Written in 2023
Vida RucliLei
She/her in Italian – a three-lettered word crucial for the village, where the population is more female than men. The gossip goes, that the young generation created a Slavic Matriarchy here, which is an incredibly heartwarming concept. They even have a flag of “lei” which they hang on the balcony, alternating with the one with a peace symbol on it.
Written in 2022
Ola KorbańskaListening
From the Old English "hlysnan", "pay attention to". If all places are characterized by their soundscapes, these are often richer than ever in the proximity of the margin, and being there demands for listening, for paying attention. To take care of something also means to be able to listen to it, and arriving in a place is always also a matter of letting it talk to you. Topolò always welcomes me with its soundscape of sounds, languages and voices, familiar and foreign ones: and it is surely no coincidence that right here a radio was born, and that I can listen to the sounds and voices of Topolò through it, even when I am not there.
Written in 2022
Maria MoschioniListening (new)
“It is not one and the other who are listening to each other; it is actually listening that is unfolding between them. This gentleness arises because it connects two strangers who have become intimate; once or twice a week, same time, same place. These strangers were once children whose thoughts, imagination, fears, longing, amazement, feelings of love are lodged in fragments of light in the body, in words, in what lights up their eyes. The power of listening is an activator, in the folds---as understood by Deleuze---of the psyche that are microrecorders of the real. Listening watches over the unexpected.”
→ from Power of Gentleness. Meditations on the Risk of Living by Anne Dufourmantelle
Maintenance
In the spirit of giving care and attention, maintenance does not necessarily mean a return to any particular condition, or even transformation into a new state. Nothing performative, we just come to the land together, or alone. Maintenance entails ongoingness, indeterminacy, a certain sense of precarity that demands attention. Presence. Celebration. Being in the place. A noticing of what is there now, and what could become.
Maintaining a landscape is about maintaining relationships.
written in 2023
Antonio SotgiuMargins
Margins (geographical, topographical, as well as social), in opposition to centres, are spaces which are usually perceived as conservative, slow, un-creative and nostalgic. On the contrary, we like to intend them as places of radical openness (bell hooks), spaces particularly fertile with possibilities for change (Catriona Mortimer Sandilands), zones of unpredictability, at the edges of discursive stability (Anna Tsing). Margins, as well as peripheries, borders, edges, interstitial spaces and liminal zones are places of meetings, impacts and crossings, where ideas, life worlds, experiences and cultures collide and intermingle.
WRITTEN IN 2023
Vida RucliMud
“Being mud is really different from being granite and should be treated differently. Mud lies around being wet and heavy and oozy and generative. Mud is underfoot. People make footprints in mud. As mud I accept feet. I accept weight. I try to be supportive, I like to be obliging.”
→ from Being Taken for Granite by Ursula K. Le Guin
written in 2023
Vida RucliObserving
In Topolò, one does not come to see things, or even just to look at them. One listens and observes. A landscape, a leaf, a gesture, a stone, a breath, a detail, a noise, a lichen, a relationship, a memory. From the micro to the macro, and vice versa, from the physical object to its abstraction. "Observing", from the Latin "ob-servare" or "to preserve, guard, consider", brings one back to the personal sphere of the in-depth understanding of things. In observing something, all of the action that this something exerts upon us is reflected.
I believe that knowing how to observe a place is the first step in taking care of it.
Written in 2022
Elena RucliParasitic Reading Room
The Parasitic Reading Room is an open format formed by a multitude of voices in a spontaneous set of reading spaces. Texts gathered in a reader are spoken out loud by participants who should have a willingness to be affected by other voices and ideas. A Parasitic Reading Room intends to provoke a contagion of knowledge by acting as a parasite of its chosen site, as well as its reading participants. There is no straight line for the Parasitic Reading Room, but a zigzag of joyful moments which bring a multitude of voices to contemplate future imaginaries for spatial practices.
→ from Climate Care Reader 2021 by Rosario Talevi
Written in 2021
Rosario TaleviPeer pressure / Beer pressure
Peer pressure is a well known phenomenon of being influenced by others in the group to engage in a behavior or activity that you may not otherwise engage in. It gives an opportunity to experience something new, stretch the bones, push yourself a bit further, take risks, feel alive. The subjects change as we grow: youths would do drugs, ride motorbikes or watch porn, people in their 30s would rather go for bouldering, jewelry making or pottery classes. It is a great force, but also can be tiring as hell.
The other famous phenomenon (very popular in the region of Brandenburg) is a beer pressure — the social urge to go out for a beer, or go out in general. It is flattering to get invitations, and yes, it is a pleasurable activity.
Yet, in both cases it is important to allow yourself to say I could not care less, and consequently do nothing, perhaps lie on the floor if that is what you crave for.
written in 2023
Ola KorbańskaPolitics of relation
“A politics of relation is not striving toward absolute alterity to the self, but rather to tip the concept of “subjectivity” away from “individuality” and in the direction of the inclination toward the other so that “being” is constituted not first through the “Self”, but through its own longings to be with. Belonging precedes being.”
→ from Be-Longing: Towards a Feminist Politics of Relation by Aimee Carillo Rowe
See also Positionality and Be-Longing
written in 2023
Vida RucliPolyrhythm
Brandon LaBelle defines Rhythm as—“the making of a particular order; it rivets together time and space according to certain energy expenditures, defining a relation amongst bodies and things; it is a field in which different orders meet, regimenting bodies while also affording acts of modulation and breakage; the beat is a territorial dispute, an argument; it is a violence bringing pain and pleasure together, teaching us how to find place and also how to redefine, reorganize or disrupt existing patterns”.
From Rhythm to Polyrhythm.
Polyrhythm is the simultaneous experience of two or more personal rhythms that are not readily perceived as deriving from one another but create an unexpected experience for both parties.
Written in 2021
Jack BardwellPositionality
“I am advocating a shift from a notion of identity that begins with “I” – as does the inscription “I-dentity”, which announces “I am…” – to a sense of “self” that is radically inclined towards others, toward the communities to which we belong, with whom we long to be, and to whom we feel accountable. Perhaps “positionality”, with its multiply placed “i’s” is a more appropriate signifier.”
→ from Be-Longing: Towards a Feminist Politics of Relation by Aimee Carillo Rowe
see also Politics of Relation and Be-Longing
written in 2023
Vida RucliRadical affection
"Radical Affection is a call for tender acts of individual and collective imagination through which new axes of caring, connection, and resilience might be forged. Calling those acts “radical” speaks to their power not only to transform how we live together, but also to a promise of emancipating people from structure and ideologies that have limited their thinking and thwarted agency."
→ from Slow Spatial Reader – Chronicles of Radical Affection by Carolyn F. Strauss (ed.)
Written in 2021
Vida RucliRe-cultivation
RE-CULTIVATION → to cause to grow or flourish anew
Written in 2022
Studio WildRe-placing
To bring words back to place, to ground them, to locate them. We discussed a lot about some terms, such as the word residency, so loaded with content which we would not necessarily find fitting our practices. But instead of replacing these words with others, instead of substituting them or ever re-inventing them, we start here with re-placing them, making them fitting our place, our context, our community.
Written in 2021
Vida RucliRelaxed and disciplined
One of the most prominent Slovene partisan poets Matej Bor once wrote: “The rhythm of Slovene revolutionary poetry must merge into one with our liberation struggle. And what is the rhythm of the awakened Slovenian masses? Relaxed and disciplined at the same time. Why would we search for form in various currents and -isms? Form is dictated to us by our flowing life itself.” Living in an abandoned village throughout the whole year requires intentionality in both discipline and relaxation. While life in the city is guided by the city-flow, in Topolò, the lack of the gaze of another during winter and our consequential habit of this lack turned our gaze to the flow of surrounding nature, our loyal companion: be persistent and disciplined in growing, generous and relaxed in giving.
Written in 2022
Aljaž ŠkrlepResidency
The term residency, and especially artist residency, is many times the carrier of a concept that we do not find appropriate for the type of involvement we wish to generate in our place. We do not see the residency as a place where the artist/researcher/architect/etc. would withdraw, a creative retreat where the person is isolated and self-focused.
Anyway we don’t want to find another word but to re-claim the word residency which we found interesting as it is a chronotope (using Michail Bakhtin word, coined in 1973) – it contains a spatial dimension (meaning the concrete place where the person is hosted) and at the same time a temporal dimension (recalling a defined period of time in which the person is hosted). Other words do not have this quality, some (as guesthouse) refer much more to a specific space, others (as sojourn) refer to a period of time. Residency is here intended as a permeable space – that reacts, reflects and cares for what it has around it – and as an expandable time – guests can prolong their stay, return and start to build, through time, a relation with the place.
See also Temporary Dweller, Return, Village as House
Written in 2021
Vida RucliResponsibility
Joan C. Tronto and Berenice Fisher in the text Care as a Basis for Radical Political Judgements (1995) suggest four phases of care, each of which has a concomitant virtue. The first of these four phases is “caring about'' and its related virtue is attentiveness; the second phase is “taking care of” and the pertinent virtue is responsibility. (The other two phases and virtues are “care-giving” – competence and “care-receiving” – responsiveness).
Written in 2021
Vida RucliReturn
What does it mean to return to a place, each time rooting deeper. To connect to place, its people, plants is to take part, be with it, through it, over and under it. By taking distance we can observe growth, transformation and take direction. Returning is about taking time to look back and look forward. It’s about remembering and dreaming. It’s about taking apart and (re) building. Returning is about movement with care, with trust and with doubt in order to know a little more and a little less.
Written in 2022
Suzanne BernhardtRituals
“Rituals are symbolic techniques of making oneself at home in the world. (...) They are to time what home is to space. They render time habitable.”
→ from The Disappearance of Rituals by Byung-Chul Han
See also Routines
Written in 2023
Vida RucliRoutines
And with the passage of time; and again; another time; routines live in repetition, in the execution of an act over and over, again and again.
Routine comes from route, path, road. A personal or collective practice that comes with experience, patience and time. When thinking about them the image of a wheel (from french roue) comes to mind—this round object moves forward just by rotating on itself. It needs the energy to do so but once it’s in movement it goes.
These repeated gestures allow us to orientate in time and space, as daylight and dark, giving a rhythm to our days, months, years. Routines can be site specific: an act performed with the land, a facility or specific person; "nomadic": they belong to the body, you carry them around for all your life; and alienating or monotonous, when related to work.
Written in 2021
Franca LucchittaRuin
Gilles Deleuze reading Charles Dickens: “A disreputable man, a rogue, held in contempt by everyone, is found as he lies dying. Suddenly, those taking care of him manifest an eagerness, respect, even love, for his slightest sign of life. Everybody bustles about to save him, to the point where, in his deepest coma, this wicked man himself senses something soft and sweet penetrating him. But to the degree that he comes back to life, his saviors turn colder, and he becomes once again mean and crude. Between his life and his death, there is a moment that is only that of a life playing with death." That very moment is the moment of the ruin: we admire it, because while dying, a life shines through it. This realization that life and death play in everything that is, is cultivated while admiring the ruin.
Written in 2022
Aljaž ŠkrlepSituated Knowledges
Situated knowledges are about communities, not about isolated individuals. The only way to find a larger vision is to be somewhere in particular. The science question in feminism is about objectivity as positioned rationality. Its images are not the products of escape and transcendence of limits (the view from above) but the joining of partial views and hating voices into a collective subject position that promises a vision of the means of ongoing finite embodiment, of living without limits and contradictions – of views from somewhere.
→ from Situated Knowledges: The Science Question in Feminism and the Privilege of Partial Perspective by Donna Haraway
Written in 2021
Vida RucliSpirit
The word Spirit has its roots in the Latin “spiritus” meaning breath, which might explain why spiritous means humorous in Italian. A laugh is after all an exercise in uncontrollable breathing, an escaping spirit perhaps. While in Topolò I became fascinated with the pirate process of creating grappa in the region. The illegality of this ancient process and all the social, spatial implications of this. Distillation can be traced back to 1200 BCE describing processes of perfumery. But it is the 14th Century alchemists using these processes to try and transform everyday materials into gold who saw this process as extracting the spirit of fruit or plant matter hence the term Spirits to describe this strong alcoholic beverage. To alchemists, drinking grappa would be consuming the spirit, the life force, of the grape. These processes still have a kind of magic about them. I find these alchemists an inspiring analogy for the creative process. The alchemists took their own imagination so seriously, like a kid making a mud pie in the garden that eventually, serendipitously they were creating alcohol, modern science and medicine.
Alchemy → Science
Spirits → Alcohol
Agriculture → Culture
Written in 2022
Jack BardwellStones
If one can patiently stand still within the slippery landscape, if one lets the freezing water fall on them with no particular reaction, if one knows how to win and lose the paper, rock, scissors game, if one is cool, and quiet, and pretty, means they learned well from the allies of this place – stones.
Written in 2022
Ola KorbańskaStrategic antropomorphism
Knowledge is a form of persuasion. It distributes visibility and power. We know that we cannot know precisely. So why not know creatively? One of the most potent and primordial strategies of creative human thinking is anthropomorphizing. It was always perceived as an anti-philosophical all-too-human colonization of the non-human. However, when a poet personifies non-human entities, he does not merely compare, but also creates: a new possible form of sensation which sees non-human entities as agents with their own autonomous power. Get out of your chair too quickly and the stars themselves will rush before your eyes; the crickets are trying to tell you something; the stone rolling along the ridge is its way of self-expression.
Written in 2022
Aljaž ŠkrlepSupport
“We define 'support' as the ways your needs for well being are met in order to dream, practice, and work on any project. Support extends beyond the life of the project, often shaping the ways in which people navigate the contradictions of living and working. We are focused not on the support practices that we utilize for short-term projects, but on the ongoing support that is necessary for livelihood and for social reproduction.”
→ from Reproducing the Struggle: A New Feminist Perspective on the Concept of Social Reproduction by Fulvia Serra (2015)
Written in 2021
Lenn CoxSymbiosis imperative
A common need and demand to live in symbiosis with each other, with ‘the other’, in order to survive (global but also personal) challenges. Only together can we get there.
See also Interspecies Space
Written in 2022
Janja ŠušnjarSymposium
We were initially hesitant to use this term to describe our two-days gathering because it recalls serious academic meetings. In its roots, however, it indicates the act of being together, often accompanied by music and chants (and traditionally food and wine). We liked this second interpretation!
Written in 2021
Vida RucliTacit knowledge
Tacit knowledge is the knowledge you have gained through living experience, both in your personal life and professional development. It is often subjective, informal, and difficult to share or express because it is affected by our personal beliefs and values.
Written in 2022
Studio WildTemporary dweller
Dwelling is primarily the establishment of a relationship between a human being and the environment. This relationship is established through identification or a sense of belonging to a certain place. Hence, the dwelling community is not necessarily only people permanently living in the place, but also those who have an affection to the place and dedicate care to it. Those who keep returning, those who spend every holiday in a specific place, those who create for the place, those who are inspired by the place, those who experience it as a safe shelter, waiting for them like family. The set of relations between people dwelling in place and people visiting/returning are bound in time, not in a hurry, but in a low spiral time. Community is built on values such as reciprocity, collaboration, support, and care.
See also Residency, Responsibility, Return, Visiting
Written in 2023
Janja ŠušnjarToolbox house
Hybrid space of "super-living"; Active and generative resource (in botany: generative nucleus, the one present in the pollen grain). A place without a perimeter, conceptually infinite. Capable of functional metamorphosis, the toolbox house responds to the needs that question it, flourishes with transitory, totally usable tools and spatial solutions. Space that lends itself to change, puts itself into play.
Written in 2021
Laura SavinaTopophilia
Topophilia - a term coined by the geographer Yi-Fu Tuan - is the affective bond between people and place or setting. Diffuse as concept, vivid and concrete as personal experience, the term topophilia couples sentiment with place. Topolò/Topolove is for us the receiver of that affection Tuan is speaking about which is rooted, for many of us, in actually inhabiting the place, be it short term, long term, permanently or cyclically.
Written in 2023
Vida RucliTramontana (wind)
A message from the sea. To remind the mountains of the oceans. The word came from Latin trānsmontānus (trāns- + montānus), beyond/across the mountains, Alps in the North of Italy. The word has other non-wind-related senses: it can refer to anything that comes from, or anyone who lives on, the other side of mountains, or even more generally, anything seen as foreign, strange, or even barbarous.
Written in 2022
Suzanne BernhardtUndisciplined
“Undisciplined practice is too busy with proliferating sensibilities, issues, demands, requests, complains, entanglements, methods, and questions to bother with the inherent etiquette of disciplinarity. It insists on a mode of thinking and making that is situated and ad-hoc. It is anti-solutionist and motivated by the need for rigorous uncalibration and disobedient action research.”
→ Femke Snelting in Making Matters by Janneke Wesseling & Florian Cramer (eds.)
Written in 2022
Vida RucliUseless care
Within a landscape which is abandoned since fifty years, a once productive land which today hosts a young forest, a post or ex rural landscape – what does care mean? What type of minimal gestures could represent transformation or even only maintenance? Useless care is represented by those types of gestures and practices which do probably not make any difference, do not change the course of landscape’s transformation: they describe an attitude toward a territory, they are memento of your presence right there, a caress to the environment that surrounds you every day. They speak of collaboration and co-habitation, rather than of control and use of the land. Small gestures of useless care could represent a possible feminist approach to abandoned landscapes to which we feel a certain affection.
Written in 2022
Vida RucliVernacular
Vernacular are, I think, all those products, objects, buildings, works that organically develop out of practices of dwelling. They are therefore situated, embodied, vulnerable (“because location is about vulnerability” says Donna Haraway in her Situated Knowledges). This definition of vernacularity as practice of dwelling came out during the Morning Reading Room sessions on Radio Robida, talking with Jack Bardwell.
Written in 2022
Vida RucliVillage as House
A concept elaborated by Janja Šušnjar in 2019 in her master thesis that reflects on a specific way of inhabiting the village of Topolò/Topolove by Robida collective, namely as if the village itself is a house.
Such a way of conceiving the village invites its dwellers to fluidly move from one building to another – from their private bedroom, to the common kitchen or workshop – inhabiting the village as a set of interconnected spaces.
This spatial concept, built upon the decentralisation of the house, stimulates an extension of the relation of care, which is directed not only to private spaces but also to common buildings and the spaces between them: the idea and practice stimulates inhabitants to actively engage in the care and well-being of the entire village.
Topolò/Topolove – the Village as House is therefore an experiential exercise of collective care-taking of a place, where inhabitants of Topolò are re-imagined as stewards and custodians of the village.
Written in 2023
Vida RucliVine
Holding on, reaching out. Following the vines around the village and around the terraces surrounding the village. Along their reaching, holding on whatever support structure they can find. The vines show us how to reach out. Guide us to unexpected support structures and invite to this dance over the seasons.
Written in 2022
Suzanne BernhardtVisiting
Visiting is not an easy practice; it demands the ability to find others actively interesting… to cultivate the wild virtue of curiosity, to retune one/s ability to sense and respond – and to do all this politely! → from Staying with the Trouble – Making Kin in the Chtulucene by Donna Haraway
Written in 2021
Vida RucliWho is cooking
Present continuous tense of the verb to cook, to be distinguished from "who cooks?" whose verbal form presupposes asking the question at such a time that one still has to decide, through a more or less established organisational scheme, who is actually going to prepare food. "Who's cooking?", on the other hand, is a kind of magic formula, encompassing layered and emblematic meanings. First, it presupposes that someone, even someone you don't know, is already taking care of you and the people around you, before you even realise it, devoting part of their time to putting together a meal that they will never know for sure how many will eat. It then implies the sudden reorganisation of the activities in progress, the calculation of the remaining time, the strategic choice of the place to eat, the division of tasks between who will go to help, who will spread the word, who will start the comments, who will go to set the table (or the wall, the lawn, the stones). Automatically it will become clear who has to tidy up and wash the dishes. "Who is cooking?" is a question whose answer suggests new flavours, experiments, exchanges of recipes and secrets, surprises. The person or persons who take on this precious task choose to share a part of themselves, the place they come from, memories and habits, dirty hands, aprons and sweat included. So, who is cooking?
Written in 2022
Laura SavinaWild Tongues
How to walk through the wilderness of languages and landscapes?
We - members of Robida collective - always choose a guiding question for the year and the one mentioned above was my question for 2023. It manifested itself after reading the book by Gloria Anzaldúa Borderlands: Towards a New Mestiza that poetically and politically presents the author’s experience and reflections around the borderland territory between Texas and Mexico where she grew up.
Wild tongues are those tongues - hybrid, mixed and fluid - spoken at borderlands: “there, at the juncture of cultures, languages cross-pollinate and are revitalized; they die and are born” (Anzaldúa, 1987).
See also Landguage
Written in 2023
Vida RucliWith-ness
The concept derives from the text “Meteorology of Media” by the media theorist and artist Brett Zehner who proposes that, during extreme meteorological events, people develop a specific embodied intimacy and therefore they become with-nesses rather than witnesses of the event. We borrow this concept from him imagining that temporary dwellers coming to Topolò are not just witnesses, observers, of what surrounds them (working eventually with these observed things/situations/places/faces…) but they are included in the dynamics of the place, in its rhythm, sharing response-abilities and acts of care, being therefore with-nesses.
Written in 2021
Vida RucliZappa
The hoe is an ancient and versatile agricultural and horticultural hand tool used to shape soil, remove weeds, clear soil, and harvest root crops. Shaping the soil includes piling soil around the base of plants (hilling), digging narrow furrows (drills) and shallow trenches for planting seeds or bulbs.