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[[File:Map.habitat.jpg|500px|left]]
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A Tuscan-flavoured side of Romagna: Tredozio, Rocca S. Casciano, Portico e S.Benedetto. <br>
A Tuscan-flavoured side of Romagna: Tredozio, Rocca S. Casciano, Portico e S.Benedetto. <br>
Between the valleys that accompany the hills towards the sea, sinuously descending from the Appennines between Romagna and Tuscany, stand the Tramazzo and the Montone valleys, furrowed by the corresponding ''streams''. The territory, as much disputed as it is still, at times unchanged - despite being peripherally annexed to the Republic of Florence since the 1400s, has always been considered linguistically and culturally part of Romagna. The villages of Tredozio, Rocca San Casciano, Portico di Romagna and San Benedetto in Alpe are just some of the numerous, ancient settlements that dot the valleys: a border, transhumance and fallow land. A generous place, which over the centuries, in the mix of Romagna culture and Florentine political, cultural and artistic influences, still manifests tangible references in the architecture and the landscape itself. The legacy and traditions accumulated over centuries of history are still manifested in ancient forests, hermitages and abbeys, castles and noble palaces, along with other seductive examples of the mixture of human ingenuity and naturalistic heritage.
Between the valleys that accompany the hills towards the sea, sinuously descending from the Apennines between Romagna and Tuscany, stand the Tramazzo and the Montone valleys, furrowed by the corresponding ''streams''. The territory, as much disputed as it is still, at times unchanged - despite being peripherally annexed to the Republic of Florence since the 1400s, has always been considered linguistically and culturally part of Romagna. The villages of Tredozio, Rocca San Casciano, Portico di Romagna and San Benedetto in Alpe are just some of the ancient settlements that dot the valleys: a border, transhumance and fallow land known as ''Casentinesi forests''. A generous place, which over the centuries, in the mix of Romagna culture and Florentine political, cultural and artistic influences, still manifests tangible references in the architecture and the landscape itself. The legacy and traditions accumulated over centuries of history are still manifested in ancient forests, hermitages and abbeys, castles and noble palaces, along with other seductive examples of the mixture of human ingenuity and naturalistic heritage.


=➝ What do you want to make?=
=➝ What do you want to make?=

Revision as of 13:58, 20 November 2021

The Tramazzo and Montone Valleys

Map.habitat.jpg

A Tuscan-flavoured side of Romagna: Tredozio, Rocca S. Casciano, Portico e S.Benedetto.
Between the valleys that accompany the hills towards the sea, sinuously descending from the Apennines between Romagna and Tuscany, stand the Tramazzo and the Montone valleys, furrowed by the corresponding streams. The territory, as much disputed as it is still, at times unchanged - despite being peripherally annexed to the Republic of Florence since the 1400s, has always been considered linguistically and culturally part of Romagna. The villages of Tredozio, Rocca San Casciano, Portico di Romagna and San Benedetto in Alpe are just some of the ancient settlements that dot the valleys: a border, transhumance and fallow land known as Casentinesi forests. A generous place, which over the centuries, in the mix of Romagna culture and Florentine political, cultural and artistic influences, still manifests tangible references in the architecture and the landscape itself. The legacy and traditions accumulated over centuries of history are still manifested in ancient forests, hermitages and abbeys, castles and noble palaces, along with other seductive examples of the mixture of human ingenuity and naturalistic heritage.

➝ What do you want to make?

As Habitat, I want to provide a set of tools, local infrastructures and physical spaces (in the form of a residency) in order to promote creative production within small scale environments such as rural and remote areas, to respond to their need for cultural revitalization; intending to resonate with their resilience, cultural heritage and local traditions as an important chance for understanding the present. This ultra-territorial community-based model aims to re-create the ideal environments for a participative, cultural development, working as a fluid container for people and knowledge that lends itself to some form of response or interaction and making the place alive through the practices of all its participants. It is a way to experiment new, hybrid practices and cultural communities, extremely necessary in our contemporaneity. While braiding in the specific pre-existent and micro-territorial context, the residency prompts arguments and discussions around collectivism as inherently opposed to neo-liberalist consequences on a global scale. Collectively defining and addressing new possibilities for a local, cultural-based community means establishing new forms of relations between the individual and the environment, implementing tools and infrastructures that could be appropriate for the protection and promotion of the diversity of cultural development, creative expression and supporting the spring of new values in the specific territory.

"Living itself exists in forms that must be questioned, rearranged, mobilized, and undone."
N. Thompson, Living as a Form, 2012

  • On a theoretical level: Understand the local conditions, define strategies and potential impact of ultra-territorial publishing practices on remote and small-scaled areas.
  • On a practical level: (Together with Federico Poni) Shape and provide the set of local tools and infrastructures for knowledge sharing, relations making and ultra-territorial publishing, as a way to bridge the local cultural environment with the world. How can this infrastructure capture, gather and turn it into forms of publishing?

➝ How do you plan to make it?

My intention is to bring different methodologies, local services and publishing practices into action. First, by working on the idea of archive, which inevitably brings the question of how to collect and archive material from the past, while sustaining the collecting process of what is being "produced" during the present. Maybe by "inventing new systems of image description and categorisation; inventing new interfaces to image collections; inventing new kinds of images which go beyond such familiar types as a still photograph or a digital video; approaching the new super-human scale of visual data available" to unfold e re-organize past, present, and future contents.

Then, will be necessary to layout a web platform as a bridge between the local dimension with the wider public. For instance, the online radio will work both for live broadcasting and as an archive for past podcasts and interviews centred on residents experiences and remote collaborators.

For these specified purposes, I will create my own local system of infrastructures, based on Raspberry Pi computers, which could be used first to:

  1. set up a local/offline server with file upload/download → Collective Portfolio
  2. host collective-based tools such as Etherpad → Ether2html as a back-hand interface
  3. build the Archive (What then would/could be accessible from the outside?)
  4. running another RPi as a web server, bridging the residency with the world
  5. OBS for video streaming

➝ What is your timetable?

November - December

  • Research: creative communities; artivism, relational aesthetics, participatory arts
  • Finish collecting material from the first edition
  • Think about what to bring in the next AQUARIUM (Workshop about Imagining new ways of living, the ideal environment for living and working)
  • Start setup the Raspberry and Etherpad (Organise with Vo Ezn)
  • Brainstorm with Federico Poni ideas for tooling the bubble (local)
  • Keep going with Radio Broadcasting

January – February

  • Research - defining the potential impact of ultra-territorial publishing on remote areas;
  • Start building the local and online platform for archiving and sharing processes.
  • Finalizing thesis first chapter
  • Think about how can the infrastructure capture, gather and turn the local conditions into forms of publishing?
  • Prototyping: Local network, upload/download system, html2pdf
  • Which venues could be activated for the next edition? How could they be used?
  • Keep going with Radio Broadcasting
  • Graduation project: A local-based upload system for publishing? A moving antenna?

March – April

  • Prototyiping the local-based upload system for collective publishing
  • Finalizing thesis second draft 18 March - Deadline Second Draft thesis (texts to 2nd readers)
  • 1 April - Deadlines Second readers' comments
  • Finalizing thesis, 14 April - DEADLINE THESIS
  • Keep going with Radio Broadcasting
  • Launching the archive in the WWW

May

  • Finishing touches. I hope.
  • Prepare the final presentation
  • Printed publication with html2pdf - most of the contents must be already online

June

  • Graduation show

➝ Why do you want to make it?

Artistic practice can no longer revolve around the construction of objects to be consumed by a passive bystander. Instead, there must be an an art of action, interfacing with reality, taking steps-however small-to repair the social bond.
N. Thompson, Living as a Form

A slow and inevitable process of depopulation is affecting internal areas and remote villages in Italy. Started with the Industrial boom in the 70s, it's related to the seek for better and apparently more stable working opportunities, which were provided by the major urban centres with their industrial capacity and development plans. The result is a huge, forgotten heritage that could be estimated to be more than 6000 ghost villages, just in Italy.

Now that we may advance some concerns or doubts about industrial progress and the consumeristic drifts brought by them, together with the re-evaluation of the spaces we inhabit and the natural resources we privatized, could it be the moment to re-think and re-imagine ways for living and working together? Maybe by thinking of the future as a constellation of small, almost self-sustainable communities, which could easily organize themself around urgent issues and real needs.

➝ Who can help you and how?

  • Tools - infrastructures
 * Federico Poni
 * Michael Murtaugh, Manetta Berends, Vo Ezn
 * Enrico Tarò (Radio coordinator)
 
  • Residency organization - structure
 * Flee Project, decentralized cultural engineering platform dedicated to the documentation and enhancement of hybrid cultures
 * Cripta747, non-profit organization based in Torino (IT) and dedicated to the research in the contemporary art field
 * Clara Balaguer
  • Local coordination
 * Lorenzo Bosi, Vice Major of Tredozio (FC)
 * Claudia Cappelli, Cultural councilor in Portico e S. Benedetto (FC)
 * Elisa Rabiti, Cultural councilor in Rocca S. Casciano
  • Local Partnerships
 * Alpi Wood
 * Bauci Città, (the only one) bookshop
 * Sentieri Agrourbani, a network of trails inter-connecting villages and forests in the area
  • Networking
 * SPRINT – Independent Publishers and Artists' Books Salon

➝ Relation to previous practice

As an observer and things-maker, I've been always fascinated by focusing on the details. In this case, the detail takes the shape of a valley, seen from the global perspective. By acting from and for this small scale dimension, the aim becomes to explore and contribute to the multiple ways in which contents and environments in the publishing process could drive social and cultural alternatives. That for me means to take a step forward as a publisher, in the way I collect, organize and share prompted materials inside and outside the intervention area.

I see most of my previous practices potentially involved in the making of this project: Starting from the identity (which began from an aesthetic refusal), the contents from the curatorial perspective, organizing events in relation to a public which is ultra-local but also potentially global, structuring plans for social and artistic development. Habitat is giving me the possibility to really unfold what publishing means, moving from a printed matter approach to an enlarged view where the tools and infrastructure themself are becoming part of the design and thinking process. This project is working for me also as a life-experimentation playground, which gives me the possibility to think simultaneously to urgencies in terms of needs and possibilities for living, embracing the limits and conditions of specific places as topics to address. While doing that, I'm doing steps forward on the path I started last year: Raspberries and network building, hybrid publishing methods (Html-markdown-pdf), collective practices.

Thanks to the support of Fondazione Cassa dei Risparmi di Forlì, the first edition of Habitat re-activated a small village for the duration of 1 month. After this month, I realised that "this would be the place" where to begin a new, personal adventure as a human, designer and thinker. So I decided to put all my effort to keep this place open for one year, trying to start already the path that is going to follow me and then bridge the before-graduation life with the after-graduation possibilities for my future.

➝ Relation to a larger context

"The small scale intervention has become the basic unit of contemporary art."
Jeroen Boomgard – One Year In The Wild

"Habitat is not just an opportunity to work together with other realities. Habitat tries to find a new way of doing it. Habitat makes the place alive through the practices of all its participants. It is a way to experiment new, hybrid practices and cultural communities, extremely necessary in our contemporaneity. For this reason, it's not just a matter of curating projects in Tredozio, Rocca, Portico and S. Benedetto, but a community of people who know each other, building bridges by sharing a place, imagining new forms of existence for our future. " (Parasite2.0)

Habitat wants to reflect on shared, community and individual needs by promoting participatory practices for cultural development and emphasizing local and ultra-local collaboration. Away from big institutions and museums, Habitat re-activated an old village in the Appennines in order to build a mountain harbour, open to the world. Situating the research within the local boundaries, Habitat aims to be an engine for publishing as a range of cultural responses to current social and political conditions. Jacues Rancière in "The uses of Democracy" (1992) notes that the participation in what we normally refer to as democratic regimes is usually reduced to a question of filling up the spaces left empty by power. Genuine participation, he argues, is something different: the invention of an "unpredictable subject" who momentarily occupies the street, the factory or the museum rather than a fixed space of collocated participation whose counter-power is dependent on the dominant order.

➝ References/bibliography

  • GLOBAL TOOLS 1973 – 1975, Valerio Borgonuovo e Silvia Franceschini
  • Living As Form. Socially engaged art from 1991-2011, Nato Thompson, Creative Time Books
  • How Do We Make Art Of Databases? Making art of databases - Anne Nigten, p.8
  • Metadating the Image – Making art of databases – Lev Manovich, p.14
  • You Need Art When You Build a City, Hanne Hagenaars, https://laps-rietveld.nl/?p=552
  • New Creative Community, The Art of Cultural Development – Arlene Goldbard
  • One Year In The Wild, Jeroen Boomgaard – Gerry Rietveld Academy
  • Aesthetic Separation, Aesthetic Community: Scenes from the Aesthetic Regime of Art, Jacques Rancière