Amanda Selinder, fiber artist, has been collecting pigments and mushrooms near the residence for natural dyeing. She has planned her residence as a period for color research.
Up: She made a biofilm where she has been growing a symbiotic colony of bacteria and yeast.
Collecting mushrooms nearby Calle Mayor 54: Phellodon Niger (Black tooth),
Hydnellum Concrescence (Zoned tooth) and Tricholomopsis Decora (Stubbmusseron). She says: "These mushrooms are not edible, but, they are great to use as a natural dye. I've
been experimenting using different kind of mordants and different kind of
fabrics, to see how the mushroom dye react. It's an experimental process, where, I
really want to understand and get to know this interesting mushrooms."
Amanda in her studio at Lumbier shows us what she is doing:
The colors extracted, as a sort of Lumbier mushrooms color chart.
She concludes: "In my artistic practice, I try to
find another direction and approach. I try to reject the Cartesian dualistic
tradition, where the human is seen as separated from the nature, where the
humans are seen as the subject and the non-humans as the object. I want to start
over; be challenged; find other alternative directions. I want to find another
approach to this delicate and living unit, which we all are, a part of humans
and non-humans."
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