Public Species
However, you also recall some comforting experiences when you felt part of a bigger social something, formative years growing up in your home village amidst your family, friends, rural community… even allowing you to experience those who actively cared for this shared environment. But then… at some point… it must have all somehow gone astray: you moved to the big city that is slowly but surely eating its surroundings with all-encompassing growth, sprawling suburbs and concrete fences, because “this is MY property”.
And then all of a sudden, they just left it all behind — material traces just like odd reminders of “it’s complicated” and all that could have been. You wonder why they even abandoned their cars — to keep a piece of public space occupied, just in case?
But what drove them to leave in the first place? Maybe they were just sick of the city — having become increasingly alienated by its recent developments, sterile malls, and apartment complexes...? So why not have a break, return to nature, to the village, family roots, with granny slaving over a hot stove to prepare Sauerkraut soup just the way you like it. You try to imagine — to visualize — the whole city just upping sticks and heading off for vacation, a mass endeavor – the stuff of your very darkest nightmare — though one with a purpose: something like a teambuilding retreat, to make them better urbanites, because everybody is a “placemaker” — well, just another nightmare.
Text: Jürgen Rendl
Typefaces: Velvetyne Type Foundry, Setup, Grilli Type, Martin Pyšný
Thanks for creative assistance goes to Dominika Jackuliaková, Matej Žoldoš and Aurélia Garová.
Thanks for coloured paper goes to S Paper
Photodocumentation of the book: Juraj Starovecký
Self-published in 70 copies.
This project was realized thanks to the support and public grant funding by Slovak Arts Council.
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2019