Forest Law
↳ Ursula Biemann, Paulo Tavares
2014
Swiss video researcher and artist Ursula Biemann has long been interested in the ecologies and uneven distribution of the Earth’s resources, peoples, and information. In this project she is joined by Paulo Tavares, a Brazilian architect and urbanist who studies the politics of space and indigenous resistance in the Amazon, in the collaborative production of Forest Law. Forest Law draws on research Biemann and Tavares carried out in the oil-and-mining frontier of the Ecuadorian rainforest, situated at the transition between the Amazon Floodplains and the Andean Mountains. This border-zone is one of the most biodiverse and mineral-rich regions on Earth, but one which is currently under pressure from the dramatic expansion of large-scale mineral–extraction activities. At the heart of the work is a series of landmark legal cases that bring the forest and its indigenous leaders, lawyers, and scientists to court to fight for the rights of nature: with one such particularly paradigmatic trial, recently won by the indigenous people of Sarayuku in the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, whose case was based on their cosmology of the living forest, guiding Forest Law’s narrative.
- Sektion Section: Exhibition
- Programm Programme: The thing is