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Contemporary Design

Terra Cognita by Alejandra Alarc贸n

Through an exercise of filtering and curating, Terra Cognita is a landscape composed of multiple fragments encountered while walking around different locations in Finland. The objects reflect on the mistaken idea of the intact landscape and the far from natural scenery that surrounds us.

Terra Incognita: (unknown land) is a term used in cartography for regions that have not been documented.
Pieces of nature, stones, leafs etc. on a pedestal

Many things around the landscape interest me, the most intriguing is how the landscape is a construct, an idea, as geographer D.W. Meining would put it better 鈥淎ny landscape is composed not only of what lies before your eyes, but what lies within our heads鈥.

It鈥檚 hard to define the landscape, it can be so many things but still there are some visuals that remain constant, the natural objects, such as plants or hills, the artifacts like farms or windmills and the technical installations such as docks or metal wires. The landscape is just an abstraction of these things, we go through the creative act of filtering and learn to recognize the landscape: it鈥檚 all about perception.

We are still dreaming of looking for the ideal landscape, this intact image that does not exist anymore. Everything has been discovered, colonized, walked, feeding on the idea of appropriating nature. The Anthroposcenic landscape has become the new normal, it鈥檚 hard to distinguish between the altered and 鈥渘atural鈥 state.

Image of an exhibition setup "Terra Cognita" where found pieces of nature are set as an installation on pedestals

I have built my own landscape, filtering and curating while walking across Anthroposcenic environments. Reflecting on how I can break the idea of a single 鈥渋mage鈥, gathering different fragments that I encounter.

This project is a manifest of the absence of the ideal landscape, where everything has already been shaped by humans. Terra Cognita is an installation where I share my walking memories, inviting the audience to wander around and interact with these familiar grounds.

Sticks, rocks, leafs and other natural objects on a white pedestal

Meinig, D. W. (1976). The Beholding Eye: Ten Versions of the Same Scene. Landscape Architecture, 66(1), 47鈥54. http://www.jstor.org/stable/44664125

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The work is a series of sculptures, that give a physical form to a variety of pessimistic inner voices stemming from deep within the subconscious. The beings feed on the feelings of fear, insecurity, frustration, self-doubt and uncertainty. They speak through their synthesized voices, craving for attention and validation, constantly reminding of their existence.


Contemporary Design
a hanging sculpture made of wooden parts and metal wire

One by Roosa Muukkonen

This work was a means to make sense of my own lived experience with a dissociative disorder. Along the way I found out that wholes are not necessarily ones, and that more important than unified fronts are the dialogues in-betweens. Sense of connection creates a sense of common ground, a safe space for change and growth.

The end result is 鈥渙ne鈥 sculpture made of numerous separate parts, coming together to form a whole, held together by their connect.


Contemporary Design
four organic shaped works hung on a white wall

To Become by Maria Nurminen

This work explores the moment of change. What happens when something comes to a point of its life cycle, where it ceases to be what it was? At that moment, old structures get dismantled and its substance splits into a countless number of particles. These particles then travel where they are taken to, and become a part of something else.


Contemporary Design
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