Kinnomic Botany: Freeing the Potato from it’s Scientific and Colonial ties (2020-3) is a video, participatory installation, and research. The project sets out a vision of a parallel botanical world through the ‘eyes’ of a potato. Entered through a clay pot, the landscape makes visual a system of mapping that encompasses what has long been lost from the potato’s history, while offering new pathways to connect with the plant world through personal and tacit experience.
It has been featured in exhibitions such as Mapping the Cartographic at Drugo More Gallery, Rijeka, and On a Table, Over Time at The Plumb, Toronto.
As a species that crossed the Atlantic from Peru, the potato is subject to a typical hero story - the unexpected reward reaped by conquistadors on their exhibitions to Peru in search of gold. Instead, they returned with the potato. The result, a spread of potatoes emerging from a narrow genetic bottleneck, and a nomenclature to represent a new order over territories, borders, and non-human bodies.
The Kinnomic Botanical Garden, film still from Kinnomic Botany
Recto: Seasonal Cycles of Potato Cultivation:
a) In the genetic lab, to cultivate the perfect French fry.
b) In the field, comunally, guided by astronomical principles.
The potato is a multi-world.
Travelling through the rips and
tears of geographic expansion.
Pulled through new lands,
to new lands.
A settler and immigrant of 5 parts,
4 lost.
- But now it’s time to re(remember),
- I am more than my tuber.
- I am my seed,
- my flower,
- my fruits,
- my roots.
The film
- Digital claymation, 10 mins
- Animation and narration by the Artist.
The installation
- Yukon Gold or yellow-as-the-tired-belly-of-the-lizard?
Participants are encouraged to pick up a potato, trace their eyes, and consider the textures of their skin. From these sensations, they create a unique name. Examples include beige-wise-whale, a violet shaft of stardust, or as surprised as a lost soul.
Each name becomes a distilled form of knowledge - a record of an interaction, rooted in observation, and an antidote to reductionism.