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cooking sections

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Very excited to share this new article we wrote with Hannah Landecker for the CCCB Lab expanding on the research for the House that Pigs built, currently on view at the Museum of Art in Public Spaces MAPS, Denmark, until 2 August.

The installation sits at the intersection between intensive food industries and the architecture of domestic interiors. It puts forward the idea of “porkmodernism” as a way to explore the economic and aesthetic enmeshment of the animal and human worlds that is reflected in the look and feel of the everyday goods and surface finishes resulting from a century of chemical inventiveness aimed at revalorising slaughter waste.

In porkmodernism, older artisanal strategies of using animal materials for candles, soap or glue were brought into the fold of industrial manufacturing in the twentieth century by extracting and purifying the different chemical components that made candles flammable, soap slippery or glue sticky in the first place. A stringent series of separation, distillation, purification and deodorisation operations was developed together with the industrialisation of animal agriculture to make profitable use of parts of the body that could not be directly eaten. Chemical polarity agents or the concentration of extracted elements such as calcium were made increasingly important to the clean lines and slick finishes of mid-century modern interiors, and the corresponding smooth textures and flowable powders of mass-produced foods, cosmetics and household goods.

The essay is part of the CCCB Lab series edited by Gerard Ortín Castellví on the future of food.

You can also read it in Català and Castellano > link in bio.
Photo: Anders Sune Berg
@cccb_barcelona @cifar.ca @maps_museum


80
2 weeks ago


Mon 30 March, 7pm 📖Join us at Reference Point to celebrate the London launch of our new book Waves Lost at Sea / Las Olas Perdidas. The evening brings together Duval Timothy, Nerea Calvillo, and Theodossis Issaias, alongside a live performance by ILĀ, in a programme reflecting on acts of reading and translation as ways of sensing and making sense of a world in transformation. Followed by drinks at the bar ✨🌊🌊🌊🌊✨
The book traces anthropogenic space, industrial food systems, and human-made climates across different projects: from artificially coloured farmed salmon and drained buffalo wetlands to ocean-filtering oysters and Sicilian tomatoes outlawed under EU regulations. It examines the legal, environmental, and metabolic struggles behind what ends up on our plates, while also opening pathways for different ecological futures.
The publication features newly commissioned essays by Nerea Calvillo, Sria Chatterjee, Ros Gray, Yayo Herrero, Theodossis Issaias, Mari Margil, and Bárbara Rodríguez Muñoz, alongside an extensive series of images with detailed captions and reflective annotations. The book moves through legal fictions, queer ecologies, disappearing landscapes, multispecies entanglements, and speculative tastes. Through these layered investigations, Waves Lost at Sea invites readers to rethink food cultures and agricultural imaginaries, decentering humans at both microscopic and planetary scales.
Waves Lost at Sea is co-published by Fundación Botín and Spector Books on the occasion of the namesake exhibition at Centro Botín, Santander (October 2025 – February 2026).

FREE event > to book link in bio

@nereacalvillo @theo_issaias @hausofila @referencepoint180 @pocoeco @ros_l_gray @yayoherrerol @barbararmunoz @centrobotin @spectorbooks


273
4
1 months ago

Welcome to the House that Pigs built, whereyour toilet, teeth and cat bowl sing the tale of their own chemical becoming.
19 March - 2 August at MAPS Museum of Art in Public Spaces
🐷🏠 🐷 🏠🐷 🏠
In the House that Pigs built, the objects of everyday domestic life sing the cumulative tale of our own times and landscapes. Chemical agencies rendered from pigs become the protagonists of tales of surface activity, hydrophobicity and sheen. These agencies, which reside everywhere in the interiors and commodities of everyday life, are born from the body well beyond the more obvious harvesting of pigs for meat, literally arising from the ashes of the grease, bones, and connective tissue rendered from slaughter waste.

A century’s worth of animals becoming chemicals and chemicals becoming animals has been at work, shaping our expectations of how things look or feel. The space visitors find themselves in reverberates the relentless poetry of contemporary processing from the undead depths of everyday objects, circling through the pig becoming world and the world becoming pig. In Denmark, pigs outnumber people by almost five to one. One-third of Denmark’s land is dedicated to pig farming. Industrial pork megafarms dominate the agricultural landscape, driving a system of intensive breeding and genetic modification in which sows are engineered to birth more than twice the natural number of piglets, producing tens of thousands of dead piglets every day as a collateral. 

Embedded within the installation is a digital civic tool that provides public access to information about the expansion of pig megafarms in Denmark and supports participation in environmental decision-making processes.

the House that Pigs built is a work by Cooking Sections, 2026, developed in collaboration with Hannah Landecker
Studio team: Max Cooper-Clark, Rosa Whiteley
Performed by: London Contemporary Voices (Connor Going, ILĀ, Rocco, Mia Shelbourne)
Sound and Music: Richy Carey
Metal fabrication: Mitre & Mondays
Recording: Urchin Studios
Data science and AI: Aleph²
Online platform: An Endless Supply
With the support of CIFAR and the British Academy
Curated by Irene Campolmi
Photos: Anders Sune Berg


261
9
1 months ago

Welcome to the House that Pigs built, whereyour toilet, teeth and cat bowl sing the tale of their own chemical becoming.
19 March - 2 August at MAPS Museum of Art in Public Spaces
🐷🏠 🐷 🏠🐷 🏠
In the House that Pigs built, the objects of everyday domestic life sing the cumulative tale of our own times and landscapes. Chemical agencies rendered from pigs become the protagonists of tales of surface activity, hydrophobicity and sheen. These agencies, which reside everywhere in the interiors and commodities of everyday life, are born from the body well beyond the more obvious harvesting of pigs for meat, literally arising from the ashes of the grease, bones, and connective tissue rendered from slaughter waste.

A century’s worth of animals becoming chemicals and chemicals becoming animals has been at work, shaping our expectations of how things look or feel. The space visitors find themselves in reverberates the relentless poetry of contemporary processing from the undead depths of everyday objects, circling through the pig becoming world and the world becoming pig. In Denmark, pigs outnumber people by almost five to one. One-third of Denmark’s land is dedicated to pig farming. Industrial pork megafarms dominate the agricultural landscape, driving a system of intensive breeding and genetic modification in which sows are engineered to birth more than twice the natural number of piglets, producing tens of thousands of dead piglets every day as a collateral. 

Embedded within the installation is a digital civic tool that provides public access to information about the expansion of pig megafarms in Denmark and supports participation in environmental decision-making processes.

the House that Pigs built is a work by Cooking Sections, 2026, developed in collaboration with Hannah Landecker
Studio team: Max Cooper-Clark, Rosa Whiteley
Performed by: London Contemporary Voices (Connor Going, ILĀ, Rocco, Mia Shelbourne)
Sound and Music: Richy Carey
Metal fabrication: Mitre & Mondays
Recording: Urchin Studios
Data science and AI: Aleph²
Online platform: An Endless Supply
With the support of CIFAR and the British Academy
Curated by Irene Campolmi
Photos: Anders Sune Berg


261
9
1 months ago

Welcome to the House that Pigs built, whereyour toilet, teeth and cat bowl sing the tale of their own chemical becoming.
19 March - 2 August at MAPS Museum of Art in Public Spaces
🐷🏠 🐷 🏠🐷 🏠
In the House that Pigs built, the objects of everyday domestic life sing the cumulative tale of our own times and landscapes. Chemical agencies rendered from pigs become the protagonists of tales of surface activity, hydrophobicity and sheen. These agencies, which reside everywhere in the interiors and commodities of everyday life, are born from the body well beyond the more obvious harvesting of pigs for meat, literally arising from the ashes of the grease, bones, and connective tissue rendered from slaughter waste.

A century’s worth of animals becoming chemicals and chemicals becoming animals has been at work, shaping our expectations of how things look or feel. The space visitors find themselves in reverberates the relentless poetry of contemporary processing from the undead depths of everyday objects, circling through the pig becoming world and the world becoming pig. In Denmark, pigs outnumber people by almost five to one. One-third of Denmark’s land is dedicated to pig farming. Industrial pork megafarms dominate the agricultural landscape, driving a system of intensive breeding and genetic modification in which sows are engineered to birth more than twice the natural number of piglets, producing tens of thousands of dead piglets every day as a collateral. 

Embedded within the installation is a digital civic tool that provides public access to information about the expansion of pig megafarms in Denmark and supports participation in environmental decision-making processes.

the House that Pigs built is a work by Cooking Sections, 2026, developed in collaboration with Hannah Landecker
Studio team: Max Cooper-Clark, Rosa Whiteley
Performed by: London Contemporary Voices (Connor Going, ILĀ, Rocco, Mia Shelbourne)
Sound and Music: Richy Carey
Metal fabrication: Mitre & Mondays
Recording: Urchin Studios
Data science and AI: Aleph²
Online platform: An Endless Supply
With the support of CIFAR and the British Academy
Curated by Irene Campolmi
Photos: Anders Sune Berg


261
9
1 months ago

Join us at the House that Pigs built
🐷 🏠 🐷 🏠
Opening 19 March
MAPS - Museum of Art in Public Spaces, Køge
With presentations by Cooking Sections and Hannah Landecker
🐷🏠 🐷 🏠🐷 🏠
In Denmark, pigs outnumber people by almost five to one. the House that Pigs built reflects on how substances extracted from the connective tissue and bones of animal bodies - particularly pigs - have, for over a century, been a more or less invisible part of everyday life. Gelatin and glycerin, fatty acids and calcium derived from slaughterhouse waste, purified and processed, enable materials to solidify or flow, to emulsify or to shine.

Visitors enter a “3D rendering” of an apartment in which each component, including a door, a window, a chair, a drying rack, and a toilet, literally “speaks” about its own making. The thick consistency of toothpaste, the smoothness of water-repellent surfaces, and numerous related chemical properties derive from pig by-products and are therefore part of the story connected to the pig industry.

The house whispers a fable of extraction and of shared material cycles: the pig is in the building; the building is in the pig.

Embedded within the installation is a digital civic tool that provides public access to information about the expansion of pig megafarms in Denmark and supports participation in environmental decision-making processes. Marking the 25th anniversary of the Aarhus Convention on the right to environmental information, the exhibition offers information and the possibility of political action, and imagining futures beyond human exceptionalism.

the House that Pigs built is a work by Cooking Sections, 2026, developed in collaboration with Hannah Landecker
Studio team: Max Cooper-Clark, Rosa Whiteley
Performed by: London Contemporary Voices (Connor Going, ILĀ, Rocco, Mia Shelbourne)
Sound and Music: Richy Carey
Metal fabrication: Mitre & Mondays
Recording: Urchin Studios
Data science and AI: Aleph²
Online platform: An Endless Supply
With the support of CIFAR Future Flourishing Programme and the British Academy
Curated by Irene Campolmi


1.1K
6
2 months ago

Last weeks to see the Waves Lost at Sea / Las Olas Perdidas at Centro Botín, Santander, on view until Sunday, 1 March.

Come and see the extraordinary performers who have kept the 11 waves alive for months: Maider G. Etxegibel, Rebeca García Celdrán, Lucía López Madrazo, Léa Misseri, Laura Ramirez Ashbaugh, Julia Zac, Zhenxiang Zhao moving to the music composition by Duval Timothy.

See you in Santander!

🌊🌊🌊
Mundaka

2003. The renowned wave
vanished overnight from the coast of Biscay.
Enormities of sand dredged
to improve ship access.
Sediment flows, fatally disrupted.
Tourism, decimated.

Despite Europe’s first to receive formal recognition,
the wave only came back sporadically, fragile.

Some interpreted the wave’s disappearance as
a retreat of Basque goddess Mari,
her silence a rebuke to sand theft.

@centrobotin


466
16
3 months ago

Waves Lost at Sea is out, and we’ll be speaking about the work, the book, the process, and upcoming projects this week: tonight (Wednesday) at 7pm at Centro Botín, Santander, in conversation with Yayo Herrero…and tomorrow (Thursday) at 7pm at Infinito Delicias, Madrid, in conversation with Dani Burrows.

Waves Lost At Sea / Las Olas Perdidas follows the evolving practice of Cooking Sections, founded in London by Daniel Fernández Pascual and Alon Schwabe. Since 2013, their work moves between visual arts, architecture, and ecology, investigating the infrastructures and extractive legacies of industrial food systems and human-made climates: from artificially coloured farmed salmon and drained buffalo wetlands to ocean-filtering oysters and outlawed Sicilian tomatoes. Decentering humans across microscopic and planetary scales, their practice reveals the legal, metabolic, and environmental struggles behind what ends up on our plates, while imagining future horizons.
Published on the occasion of Cooking Sections’ namesake exhibition, curated by Bárbara Rodríguez Muñoz at Centro Botín, Santander (18 Oct 2025–1 March 2026), this monograph brings together six newly commissioned essays alongside an extensive sequence of images with detailed captions and annotations by the artists. Traversing legal fictions, queer ecologies, postindustrial landscapes, multispecies entanglements, and speculative tastes, Waves Lost at Sea brings together contributions by: Nerea Calvillo, Sria Chatterjee, Ros Gray, Yayo Herrero, Theodossis Issaias, Mari Margil.

Bilingual edition (English/Spanish)
Co-published by Spector Books and Centro Botín
Graphic design: Malin Gewinner
Text editing: Amy Sherlock
Translations: Daniel Lacasta Fitzsimmons

@centrobotin @fundacionbotin @spectorbooks @ros_l_gray @nereacalvillo @pocoeco @theo_issaias @fundacion_carasso @_lourdescabrera_ @yayoherrerol @barbararmunoz @infinitodelicias


522
17
3 months ago


Waves Lost at Sea is out, and we’ll be speaking about the work, the book, the process, and upcoming projects this week: tonight (Wednesday) at 7pm at Centro Botín, Santander, in conversation with Yayo Herrero…and tomorrow (Thursday) at 7pm at Infinito Delicias, Madrid, in conversation with Dani Burrows.

Waves Lost At Sea / Las Olas Perdidas follows the evolving practice of Cooking Sections, founded in London by Daniel Fernández Pascual and Alon Schwabe. Since 2013, their work moves between visual arts, architecture, and ecology, investigating the infrastructures and extractive legacies of industrial food systems and human-made climates: from artificially coloured farmed salmon and drained buffalo wetlands to ocean-filtering oysters and outlawed Sicilian tomatoes. Decentering humans across microscopic and planetary scales, their practice reveals the legal, metabolic, and environmental struggles behind what ends up on our plates, while imagining future horizons.
Published on the occasion of Cooking Sections’ namesake exhibition, curated by Bárbara Rodríguez Muñoz at Centro Botín, Santander (18 Oct 2025–1 March 2026), this monograph brings together six newly commissioned essays alongside an extensive sequence of images with detailed captions and annotations by the artists. Traversing legal fictions, queer ecologies, postindustrial landscapes, multispecies entanglements, and speculative tastes, Waves Lost at Sea brings together contributions by: Nerea Calvillo, Sria Chatterjee, Ros Gray, Yayo Herrero, Theodossis Issaias, Mari Margil.

Bilingual edition (English/Spanish)
Co-published by Spector Books and Centro Botín
Graphic design: Malin Gewinner
Text editing: Amy Sherlock
Translations: Daniel Lacasta Fitzsimmons

@centrobotin @fundacionbotin @spectorbooks @ros_l_gray @nereacalvillo @pocoeco @theo_issaias @fundacion_carasso @_lourdescabrera_ @yayoherrerol @barbararmunoz @infinitodelicias


522
17
3 months ago

Waves Lost at Sea is out, and we’ll be speaking about the work, the book, the process, and upcoming projects this week: tonight (Wednesday) at 7pm at Centro Botín, Santander, in conversation with Yayo Herrero…and tomorrow (Thursday) at 7pm at Infinito Delicias, Madrid, in conversation with Dani Burrows.

Waves Lost At Sea / Las Olas Perdidas follows the evolving practice of Cooking Sections, founded in London by Daniel Fernández Pascual and Alon Schwabe. Since 2013, their work moves between visual arts, architecture, and ecology, investigating the infrastructures and extractive legacies of industrial food systems and human-made climates: from artificially coloured farmed salmon and drained buffalo wetlands to ocean-filtering oysters and outlawed Sicilian tomatoes. Decentering humans across microscopic and planetary scales, their practice reveals the legal, metabolic, and environmental struggles behind what ends up on our plates, while imagining future horizons.
Published on the occasion of Cooking Sections’ namesake exhibition, curated by Bárbara Rodríguez Muñoz at Centro Botín, Santander (18 Oct 2025–1 March 2026), this monograph brings together six newly commissioned essays alongside an extensive sequence of images with detailed captions and annotations by the artists. Traversing legal fictions, queer ecologies, postindustrial landscapes, multispecies entanglements, and speculative tastes, Waves Lost at Sea brings together contributions by: Nerea Calvillo, Sria Chatterjee, Ros Gray, Yayo Herrero, Theodossis Issaias, Mari Margil.

Bilingual edition (English/Spanish)
Co-published by Spector Books and Centro Botín
Graphic design: Malin Gewinner
Text editing: Amy Sherlock
Translations: Daniel Lacasta Fitzsimmons

@centrobotin @fundacionbotin @spectorbooks @ros_l_gray @nereacalvillo @pocoeco @theo_issaias @fundacion_carasso @_lourdescabrera_ @yayoherrerol @barbararmunoz @infinitodelicias


522
17
3 months ago

Waves Lost at Sea is out, and we’ll be speaking about the work, the book, the process, and upcoming projects this week: tonight (Wednesday) at 7pm at Centro Botín, Santander, in conversation with Yayo Herrero…and tomorrow (Thursday) at 7pm at Infinito Delicias, Madrid, in conversation with Dani Burrows.

Waves Lost At Sea / Las Olas Perdidas follows the evolving practice of Cooking Sections, founded in London by Daniel Fernández Pascual and Alon Schwabe. Since 2013, their work moves between visual arts, architecture, and ecology, investigating the infrastructures and extractive legacies of industrial food systems and human-made climates: from artificially coloured farmed salmon and drained buffalo wetlands to ocean-filtering oysters and outlawed Sicilian tomatoes. Decentering humans across microscopic and planetary scales, their practice reveals the legal, metabolic, and environmental struggles behind what ends up on our plates, while imagining future horizons.
Published on the occasion of Cooking Sections’ namesake exhibition, curated by Bárbara Rodríguez Muñoz at Centro Botín, Santander (18 Oct 2025–1 March 2026), this monograph brings together six newly commissioned essays alongside an extensive sequence of images with detailed captions and annotations by the artists. Traversing legal fictions, queer ecologies, postindustrial landscapes, multispecies entanglements, and speculative tastes, Waves Lost at Sea brings together contributions by: Nerea Calvillo, Sria Chatterjee, Ros Gray, Yayo Herrero, Theodossis Issaias, Mari Margil.

Bilingual edition (English/Spanish)
Co-published by Spector Books and Centro Botín
Graphic design: Malin Gewinner
Text editing: Amy Sherlock
Translations: Daniel Lacasta Fitzsimmons

@centrobotin @fundacionbotin @spectorbooks @ros_l_gray @nereacalvillo @pocoeco @theo_issaias @fundacion_carasso @_lourdescabrera_ @yayoherrerol @barbararmunoz @infinitodelicias


522
17
3 months ago

Waves Lost at Sea is out, and we’ll be speaking about the work, the book, the process, and upcoming projects this week: tonight (Wednesday) at 7pm at Centro Botín, Santander, in conversation with Yayo Herrero…and tomorrow (Thursday) at 7pm at Infinito Delicias, Madrid, in conversation with Dani Burrows.

Waves Lost At Sea / Las Olas Perdidas follows the evolving practice of Cooking Sections, founded in London by Daniel Fernández Pascual and Alon Schwabe. Since 2013, their work moves between visual arts, architecture, and ecology, investigating the infrastructures and extractive legacies of industrial food systems and human-made climates: from artificially coloured farmed salmon and drained buffalo wetlands to ocean-filtering oysters and outlawed Sicilian tomatoes. Decentering humans across microscopic and planetary scales, their practice reveals the legal, metabolic, and environmental struggles behind what ends up on our plates, while imagining future horizons.
Published on the occasion of Cooking Sections’ namesake exhibition, curated by Bárbara Rodríguez Muñoz at Centro Botín, Santander (18 Oct 2025–1 March 2026), this monograph brings together six newly commissioned essays alongside an extensive sequence of images with detailed captions and annotations by the artists. Traversing legal fictions, queer ecologies, postindustrial landscapes, multispecies entanglements, and speculative tastes, Waves Lost at Sea brings together contributions by: Nerea Calvillo, Sria Chatterjee, Ros Gray, Yayo Herrero, Theodossis Issaias, Mari Margil.

Bilingual edition (English/Spanish)
Co-published by Spector Books and Centro Botín
Graphic design: Malin Gewinner
Text editing: Amy Sherlock
Translations: Daniel Lacasta Fitzsimmons

@centrobotin @fundacionbotin @spectorbooks @ros_l_gray @nereacalvillo @pocoeco @theo_issaias @fundacion_carasso @_lourdescabrera_ @yayoherrerol @barbararmunoz @infinitodelicias


522
17
3 months ago

Waves Lost at Sea is out, and we’ll be speaking about the work, the book, the process, and upcoming projects this week: tonight (Wednesday) at 7pm at Centro Botín, Santander, in conversation with Yayo Herrero…and tomorrow (Thursday) at 7pm at Infinito Delicias, Madrid, in conversation with Dani Burrows.

Waves Lost At Sea / Las Olas Perdidas follows the evolving practice of Cooking Sections, founded in London by Daniel Fernández Pascual and Alon Schwabe. Since 2013, their work moves between visual arts, architecture, and ecology, investigating the infrastructures and extractive legacies of industrial food systems and human-made climates: from artificially coloured farmed salmon and drained buffalo wetlands to ocean-filtering oysters and outlawed Sicilian tomatoes. Decentering humans across microscopic and planetary scales, their practice reveals the legal, metabolic, and environmental struggles behind what ends up on our plates, while imagining future horizons.
Published on the occasion of Cooking Sections’ namesake exhibition, curated by Bárbara Rodríguez Muñoz at Centro Botín, Santander (18 Oct 2025–1 March 2026), this monograph brings together six newly commissioned essays alongside an extensive sequence of images with detailed captions and annotations by the artists. Traversing legal fictions, queer ecologies, postindustrial landscapes, multispecies entanglements, and speculative tastes, Waves Lost at Sea brings together contributions by: Nerea Calvillo, Sria Chatterjee, Ros Gray, Yayo Herrero, Theodossis Issaias, Mari Margil.

Bilingual edition (English/Spanish)
Co-published by Spector Books and Centro Botín
Graphic design: Malin Gewinner
Text editing: Amy Sherlock
Translations: Daniel Lacasta Fitzsimmons

@centrobotin @fundacionbotin @spectorbooks @ros_l_gray @nereacalvillo @pocoeco @theo_issaias @fundacion_carasso @_lourdescabrera_ @yayoherrerol @barbararmunoz @infinitodelicias


522
17
3 months ago

Waves Lost at Sea is out, and we’ll be speaking about the work, the book, the process, and upcoming projects this week: tonight (Wednesday) at 7pm at Centro Botín, Santander, in conversation with Yayo Herrero…and tomorrow (Thursday) at 7pm at Infinito Delicias, Madrid, in conversation with Dani Burrows.

Waves Lost At Sea / Las Olas Perdidas follows the evolving practice of Cooking Sections, founded in London by Daniel Fernández Pascual and Alon Schwabe. Since 2013, their work moves between visual arts, architecture, and ecology, investigating the infrastructures and extractive legacies of industrial food systems and human-made climates: from artificially coloured farmed salmon and drained buffalo wetlands to ocean-filtering oysters and outlawed Sicilian tomatoes. Decentering humans across microscopic and planetary scales, their practice reveals the legal, metabolic, and environmental struggles behind what ends up on our plates, while imagining future horizons.
Published on the occasion of Cooking Sections’ namesake exhibition, curated by Bárbara Rodríguez Muñoz at Centro Botín, Santander (18 Oct 2025–1 March 2026), this monograph brings together six newly commissioned essays alongside an extensive sequence of images with detailed captions and annotations by the artists. Traversing legal fictions, queer ecologies, postindustrial landscapes, multispecies entanglements, and speculative tastes, Waves Lost at Sea brings together contributions by: Nerea Calvillo, Sria Chatterjee, Ros Gray, Yayo Herrero, Theodossis Issaias, Mari Margil.

Bilingual edition (English/Spanish)
Co-published by Spector Books and Centro Botín
Graphic design: Malin Gewinner
Text editing: Amy Sherlock
Translations: Daniel Lacasta Fitzsimmons

@centrobotin @fundacionbotin @spectorbooks @ros_l_gray @nereacalvillo @pocoeco @theo_issaias @fundacion_carasso @_lourdescabrera_ @yayoherrerol @barbararmunoz @infinitodelicias


522
17
3 months ago

Waves Lost at Sea is out, and we’ll be speaking about the work, the book, the process, and upcoming projects this week: tonight (Wednesday) at 7pm at Centro Botín, Santander, in conversation with Yayo Herrero…and tomorrow (Thursday) at 7pm at Infinito Delicias, Madrid, in conversation with Dani Burrows.

Waves Lost At Sea / Las Olas Perdidas follows the evolving practice of Cooking Sections, founded in London by Daniel Fernández Pascual and Alon Schwabe. Since 2013, their work moves between visual arts, architecture, and ecology, investigating the infrastructures and extractive legacies of industrial food systems and human-made climates: from artificially coloured farmed salmon and drained buffalo wetlands to ocean-filtering oysters and outlawed Sicilian tomatoes. Decentering humans across microscopic and planetary scales, their practice reveals the legal, metabolic, and environmental struggles behind what ends up on our plates, while imagining future horizons.
Published on the occasion of Cooking Sections’ namesake exhibition, curated by Bárbara Rodríguez Muñoz at Centro Botín, Santander (18 Oct 2025–1 March 2026), this monograph brings together six newly commissioned essays alongside an extensive sequence of images with detailed captions and annotations by the artists. Traversing legal fictions, queer ecologies, postindustrial landscapes, multispecies entanglements, and speculative tastes, Waves Lost at Sea brings together contributions by: Nerea Calvillo, Sria Chatterjee, Ros Gray, Yayo Herrero, Theodossis Issaias, Mari Margil.

Bilingual edition (English/Spanish)
Co-published by Spector Books and Centro Botín
Graphic design: Malin Gewinner
Text editing: Amy Sherlock
Translations: Daniel Lacasta Fitzsimmons

@centrobotin @fundacionbotin @spectorbooks @ros_l_gray @nereacalvillo @pocoeco @theo_issaias @fundacion_carasso @_lourdescabrera_ @yayoherrerol @barbararmunoz @infinitodelicias


522
17
3 months ago


Waves Lost at Sea is out, and we’ll be speaking about the work, the book, the process, and upcoming projects this week: tonight (Wednesday) at 7pm at Centro Botín, Santander, in conversation with Yayo Herrero…and tomorrow (Thursday) at 7pm at Infinito Delicias, Madrid, in conversation with Dani Burrows.

Waves Lost At Sea / Las Olas Perdidas follows the evolving practice of Cooking Sections, founded in London by Daniel Fernández Pascual and Alon Schwabe. Since 2013, their work moves between visual arts, architecture, and ecology, investigating the infrastructures and extractive legacies of industrial food systems and human-made climates: from artificially coloured farmed salmon and drained buffalo wetlands to ocean-filtering oysters and outlawed Sicilian tomatoes. Decentering humans across microscopic and planetary scales, their practice reveals the legal, metabolic, and environmental struggles behind what ends up on our plates, while imagining future horizons.
Published on the occasion of Cooking Sections’ namesake exhibition, curated by Bárbara Rodríguez Muñoz at Centro Botín, Santander (18 Oct 2025–1 March 2026), this monograph brings together six newly commissioned essays alongside an extensive sequence of images with detailed captions and annotations by the artists. Traversing legal fictions, queer ecologies, postindustrial landscapes, multispecies entanglements, and speculative tastes, Waves Lost at Sea brings together contributions by: Nerea Calvillo, Sria Chatterjee, Ros Gray, Yayo Herrero, Theodossis Issaias, Mari Margil.

Bilingual edition (English/Spanish)
Co-published by Spector Books and Centro Botín
Graphic design: Malin Gewinner
Text editing: Amy Sherlock
Translations: Daniel Lacasta Fitzsimmons

@centrobotin @fundacionbotin @spectorbooks @ros_l_gray @nereacalvillo @pocoeco @theo_issaias @fundacion_carasso @_lourdescabrera_ @yayoherrerol @barbararmunoz @infinitodelicias


522
17
3 months ago

Waves Lost at Sea is out, and we’ll be speaking about the work, the book, the process, and upcoming projects this week: tonight (Wednesday) at 7pm at Centro Botín, Santander, in conversation with Yayo Herrero…and tomorrow (Thursday) at 7pm at Infinito Delicias, Madrid, in conversation with Dani Burrows.

Waves Lost At Sea / Las Olas Perdidas follows the evolving practice of Cooking Sections, founded in London by Daniel Fernández Pascual and Alon Schwabe. Since 2013, their work moves between visual arts, architecture, and ecology, investigating the infrastructures and extractive legacies of industrial food systems and human-made climates: from artificially coloured farmed salmon and drained buffalo wetlands to ocean-filtering oysters and outlawed Sicilian tomatoes. Decentering humans across microscopic and planetary scales, their practice reveals the legal, metabolic, and environmental struggles behind what ends up on our plates, while imagining future horizons.
Published on the occasion of Cooking Sections’ namesake exhibition, curated by Bárbara Rodríguez Muñoz at Centro Botín, Santander (18 Oct 2025–1 March 2026), this monograph brings together six newly commissioned essays alongside an extensive sequence of images with detailed captions and annotations by the artists. Traversing legal fictions, queer ecologies, postindustrial landscapes, multispecies entanglements, and speculative tastes, Waves Lost at Sea brings together contributions by: Nerea Calvillo, Sria Chatterjee, Ros Gray, Yayo Herrero, Theodossis Issaias, Mari Margil.

Bilingual edition (English/Spanish)
Co-published by Spector Books and Centro Botín
Graphic design: Malin Gewinner
Text editing: Amy Sherlock
Translations: Daniel Lacasta Fitzsimmons

@centrobotin @fundacionbotin @spectorbooks @ros_l_gray @nereacalvillo @pocoeco @theo_issaias @fundacion_carasso @_lourdescabrera_ @yayoherrerol @barbararmunoz @infinitodelicias


522
17
3 months ago

OUT NOW: Cooking Sections: Waves Lost to Sea

Waves Lost at Sea traces the evolving practice of Cooking Sections—founded in London by Daniel Fernández Pascual and Alon Schwabe—whose work spans visual arts, architecture, and ecology. Since 2013, they have been investigating anthropogenic infrastructures, industrial food systems, and human-made climates: from artificially colored farmed salmon and drained buffalo wetlands to ocean-filtering oysters and Sicilian tomatoes outlawed under EU regulations. Their research-based practice exposes the legal, environmental, and metabolic struggles behind what ends up on our plates, while simultaneously working to create prospects for the future.

This monograph brings together six newly commissioned essays alongside an extensive series of images with detailed captions and reflective annotations. The book traverses legal fictions, queer ecologies, disappearing landscapes, multispecies entanglements, and speculative tastes. Through these layered investigations, Waves Lost at Sea invites readers to rethink food cultures and agricultural imaginaries—decentering humans at both microscopic and planetary scales.

@cookingsections was nominated for the 2021 Turner Prize, received the Special Prize at the 2019 Future Generation Art Prize, and was shortlisted that same year for the Visible Award for socially engaged artistic practices.

Co-published with @fundacionbotin the book appears in conjunction with the exhibition of the same name—Cooking Sections’ first show in Spain—which runs at @centrobotin , Santander, from October 2025 to February 2026.

Designed by Malin Gewinner

With contributions by Cooking Sections, @nereacalvillo , Sria Chatterjee, @ros_l_gray , @yayoherrerol , @theo_issaias , Mari Margil, @barbararmunoz

@gutenbergbeuys

@vertreter_rei
@perimeterbooks
@interartparis
@artbook


232
6
3 months ago

OUT NOW: Cooking Sections: Waves Lost to Sea

Waves Lost at Sea traces the evolving practice of Cooking Sections—founded in London by Daniel Fernández Pascual and Alon Schwabe—whose work spans visual arts, architecture, and ecology. Since 2013, they have been investigating anthropogenic infrastructures, industrial food systems, and human-made climates: from artificially colored farmed salmon and drained buffalo wetlands to ocean-filtering oysters and Sicilian tomatoes outlawed under EU regulations. Their research-based practice exposes the legal, environmental, and metabolic struggles behind what ends up on our plates, while simultaneously working to create prospects for the future.

This monograph brings together six newly commissioned essays alongside an extensive series of images with detailed captions and reflective annotations. The book traverses legal fictions, queer ecologies, disappearing landscapes, multispecies entanglements, and speculative tastes. Through these layered investigations, Waves Lost at Sea invites readers to rethink food cultures and agricultural imaginaries—decentering humans at both microscopic and planetary scales.

@cookingsections was nominated for the 2021 Turner Prize, received the Special Prize at the 2019 Future Generation Art Prize, and was shortlisted that same year for the Visible Award for socially engaged artistic practices.

Co-published with @fundacionbotin the book appears in conjunction with the exhibition of the same name—Cooking Sections’ first show in Spain—which runs at @centrobotin , Santander, from October 2025 to February 2026.

Designed by Malin Gewinner

With contributions by Cooking Sections, @nereacalvillo , Sria Chatterjee, @ros_l_gray , @yayoherrerol , @theo_issaias , Mari Margil, @barbararmunoz

@gutenbergbeuys

@vertreter_rei
@perimeterbooks
@interartparis
@artbook


232
6
3 months ago

OUT NOW: Cooking Sections: Waves Lost to Sea

Waves Lost at Sea traces the evolving practice of Cooking Sections—founded in London by Daniel Fernández Pascual and Alon Schwabe—whose work spans visual arts, architecture, and ecology. Since 2013, they have been investigating anthropogenic infrastructures, industrial food systems, and human-made climates: from artificially colored farmed salmon and drained buffalo wetlands to ocean-filtering oysters and Sicilian tomatoes outlawed under EU regulations. Their research-based practice exposes the legal, environmental, and metabolic struggles behind what ends up on our plates, while simultaneously working to create prospects for the future.

This monograph brings together six newly commissioned essays alongside an extensive series of images with detailed captions and reflective annotations. The book traverses legal fictions, queer ecologies, disappearing landscapes, multispecies entanglements, and speculative tastes. Through these layered investigations, Waves Lost at Sea invites readers to rethink food cultures and agricultural imaginaries—decentering humans at both microscopic and planetary scales.

@cookingsections was nominated for the 2021 Turner Prize, received the Special Prize at the 2019 Future Generation Art Prize, and was shortlisted that same year for the Visible Award for socially engaged artistic practices.

Co-published with @fundacionbotin the book appears in conjunction with the exhibition of the same name—Cooking Sections’ first show in Spain—which runs at @centrobotin , Santander, from October 2025 to February 2026.

Designed by Malin Gewinner

With contributions by Cooking Sections, @nereacalvillo , Sria Chatterjee, @ros_l_gray , @yayoherrerol , @theo_issaias , Mari Margil, @barbararmunoz

@gutenbergbeuys

@vertreter_rei
@perimeterbooks
@interartparis
@artbook


232
6
3 months ago

OUT NOW: Cooking Sections: Waves Lost to Sea

Waves Lost at Sea traces the evolving practice of Cooking Sections—founded in London by Daniel Fernández Pascual and Alon Schwabe—whose work spans visual arts, architecture, and ecology. Since 2013, they have been investigating anthropogenic infrastructures, industrial food systems, and human-made climates: from artificially colored farmed salmon and drained buffalo wetlands to ocean-filtering oysters and Sicilian tomatoes outlawed under EU regulations. Their research-based practice exposes the legal, environmental, and metabolic struggles behind what ends up on our plates, while simultaneously working to create prospects for the future.

This monograph brings together six newly commissioned essays alongside an extensive series of images with detailed captions and reflective annotations. The book traverses legal fictions, queer ecologies, disappearing landscapes, multispecies entanglements, and speculative tastes. Through these layered investigations, Waves Lost at Sea invites readers to rethink food cultures and agricultural imaginaries—decentering humans at both microscopic and planetary scales.

@cookingsections was nominated for the 2021 Turner Prize, received the Special Prize at the 2019 Future Generation Art Prize, and was shortlisted that same year for the Visible Award for socially engaged artistic practices.

Co-published with @fundacionbotin the book appears in conjunction with the exhibition of the same name—Cooking Sections’ first show in Spain—which runs at @centrobotin , Santander, from October 2025 to February 2026.

Designed by Malin Gewinner

With contributions by Cooking Sections, @nereacalvillo , Sria Chatterjee, @ros_l_gray , @yayoherrerol , @theo_issaias , Mari Margil, @barbararmunoz

@gutenbergbeuys

@vertreter_rei
@perimeterbooks
@interartparis
@artbook


232
6
3 months ago


OUT NOW: Cooking Sections: Waves Lost to Sea

Waves Lost at Sea traces the evolving practice of Cooking Sections—founded in London by Daniel Fernández Pascual and Alon Schwabe—whose work spans visual arts, architecture, and ecology. Since 2013, they have been investigating anthropogenic infrastructures, industrial food systems, and human-made climates: from artificially colored farmed salmon and drained buffalo wetlands to ocean-filtering oysters and Sicilian tomatoes outlawed under EU regulations. Their research-based practice exposes the legal, environmental, and metabolic struggles behind what ends up on our plates, while simultaneously working to create prospects for the future.

This monograph brings together six newly commissioned essays alongside an extensive series of images with detailed captions and reflective annotations. The book traverses legal fictions, queer ecologies, disappearing landscapes, multispecies entanglements, and speculative tastes. Through these layered investigations, Waves Lost at Sea invites readers to rethink food cultures and agricultural imaginaries—decentering humans at both microscopic and planetary scales.

@cookingsections was nominated for the 2021 Turner Prize, received the Special Prize at the 2019 Future Generation Art Prize, and was shortlisted that same year for the Visible Award for socially engaged artistic practices.

Co-published with @fundacionbotin the book appears in conjunction with the exhibition of the same name—Cooking Sections’ first show in Spain—which runs at @centrobotin , Santander, from October 2025 to February 2026.

Designed by Malin Gewinner

With contributions by Cooking Sections, @nereacalvillo , Sria Chatterjee, @ros_l_gray , @yayoherrerol , @theo_issaias , Mari Margil, @barbararmunoz

@gutenbergbeuys

@vertreter_rei
@perimeterbooks
@interartparis
@artbook


232
6
3 months ago

OUT NOW: Cooking Sections: Waves Lost to Sea

Waves Lost at Sea traces the evolving practice of Cooking Sections—founded in London by Daniel Fernández Pascual and Alon Schwabe—whose work spans visual arts, architecture, and ecology. Since 2013, they have been investigating anthropogenic infrastructures, industrial food systems, and human-made climates: from artificially colored farmed salmon and drained buffalo wetlands to ocean-filtering oysters and Sicilian tomatoes outlawed under EU regulations. Their research-based practice exposes the legal, environmental, and metabolic struggles behind what ends up on our plates, while simultaneously working to create prospects for the future.

This monograph brings together six newly commissioned essays alongside an extensive series of images with detailed captions and reflective annotations. The book traverses legal fictions, queer ecologies, disappearing landscapes, multispecies entanglements, and speculative tastes. Through these layered investigations, Waves Lost at Sea invites readers to rethink food cultures and agricultural imaginaries—decentering humans at both microscopic and planetary scales.

@cookingsections was nominated for the 2021 Turner Prize, received the Special Prize at the 2019 Future Generation Art Prize, and was shortlisted that same year for the Visible Award for socially engaged artistic practices.

Co-published with @fundacionbotin the book appears in conjunction with the exhibition of the same name—Cooking Sections’ first show in Spain—which runs at @centrobotin , Santander, from October 2025 to February 2026.

Designed by Malin Gewinner

With contributions by Cooking Sections, @nereacalvillo , Sria Chatterjee, @ros_l_gray , @yayoherrerol , @theo_issaias , Mari Margil, @barbararmunoz

@gutenbergbeuys

@vertreter_rei
@perimeterbooks
@interartparis
@artbook


232
6
3 months ago

OUT NOW: Cooking Sections: Waves Lost to Sea

Waves Lost at Sea traces the evolving practice of Cooking Sections—founded in London by Daniel Fernández Pascual and Alon Schwabe—whose work spans visual arts, architecture, and ecology. Since 2013, they have been investigating anthropogenic infrastructures, industrial food systems, and human-made climates: from artificially colored farmed salmon and drained buffalo wetlands to ocean-filtering oysters and Sicilian tomatoes outlawed under EU regulations. Their research-based practice exposes the legal, environmental, and metabolic struggles behind what ends up on our plates, while simultaneously working to create prospects for the future.

This monograph brings together six newly commissioned essays alongside an extensive series of images with detailed captions and reflective annotations. The book traverses legal fictions, queer ecologies, disappearing landscapes, multispecies entanglements, and speculative tastes. Through these layered investigations, Waves Lost at Sea invites readers to rethink food cultures and agricultural imaginaries—decentering humans at both microscopic and planetary scales.

@cookingsections was nominated for the 2021 Turner Prize, received the Special Prize at the 2019 Future Generation Art Prize, and was shortlisted that same year for the Visible Award for socially engaged artistic practices.

Co-published with @fundacionbotin the book appears in conjunction with the exhibition of the same name—Cooking Sections’ first show in Spain—which runs at @centrobotin , Santander, from October 2025 to February 2026.

Designed by Malin Gewinner

With contributions by Cooking Sections, @nereacalvillo , Sria Chatterjee, @ros_l_gray , @yayoherrerol , @theo_issaias , Mari Margil, @barbararmunoz

@gutenbergbeuys

@vertreter_rei
@perimeterbooks
@interartparis
@artbook


232
6
3 months ago

OUT NOW: Cooking Sections: Waves Lost to Sea

Waves Lost at Sea traces the evolving practice of Cooking Sections—founded in London by Daniel Fernández Pascual and Alon Schwabe—whose work spans visual arts, architecture, and ecology. Since 2013, they have been investigating anthropogenic infrastructures, industrial food systems, and human-made climates: from artificially colored farmed salmon and drained buffalo wetlands to ocean-filtering oysters and Sicilian tomatoes outlawed under EU regulations. Their research-based practice exposes the legal, environmental, and metabolic struggles behind what ends up on our plates, while simultaneously working to create prospects for the future.

This monograph brings together six newly commissioned essays alongside an extensive series of images with detailed captions and reflective annotations. The book traverses legal fictions, queer ecologies, disappearing landscapes, multispecies entanglements, and speculative tastes. Through these layered investigations, Waves Lost at Sea invites readers to rethink food cultures and agricultural imaginaries—decentering humans at both microscopic and planetary scales.

@cookingsections was nominated for the 2021 Turner Prize, received the Special Prize at the 2019 Future Generation Art Prize, and was shortlisted that same year for the Visible Award for socially engaged artistic practices.

Co-published with @fundacionbotin the book appears in conjunction with the exhibition of the same name—Cooking Sections’ first show in Spain—which runs at @centrobotin , Santander, from October 2025 to February 2026.

Designed by Malin Gewinner

With contributions by Cooking Sections, @nereacalvillo , Sria Chatterjee, @ros_l_gray , @yayoherrerol , @theo_issaias , Mari Margil, @barbararmunoz

@gutenbergbeuys

@vertreter_rei
@perimeterbooks
@interartparis
@artbook


232
6
3 months ago

OUT NOW: Cooking Sections: Waves Lost to Sea

Waves Lost at Sea traces the evolving practice of Cooking Sections—founded in London by Daniel Fernández Pascual and Alon Schwabe—whose work spans visual arts, architecture, and ecology. Since 2013, they have been investigating anthropogenic infrastructures, industrial food systems, and human-made climates: from artificially colored farmed salmon and drained buffalo wetlands to ocean-filtering oysters and Sicilian tomatoes outlawed under EU regulations. Their research-based practice exposes the legal, environmental, and metabolic struggles behind what ends up on our plates, while simultaneously working to create prospects for the future.

This monograph brings together six newly commissioned essays alongside an extensive series of images with detailed captions and reflective annotations. The book traverses legal fictions, queer ecologies, disappearing landscapes, multispecies entanglements, and speculative tastes. Through these layered investigations, Waves Lost at Sea invites readers to rethink food cultures and agricultural imaginaries—decentering humans at both microscopic and planetary scales.

@cookingsections was nominated for the 2021 Turner Prize, received the Special Prize at the 2019 Future Generation Art Prize, and was shortlisted that same year for the Visible Award for socially engaged artistic practices.

Co-published with @fundacionbotin the book appears in conjunction with the exhibition of the same name—Cooking Sections’ first show in Spain—which runs at @centrobotin , Santander, from October 2025 to February 2026.

Designed by Malin Gewinner

With contributions by Cooking Sections, @nereacalvillo , Sria Chatterjee, @ros_l_gray , @yayoherrerol , @theo_issaias , Mari Margil, @barbararmunoz

@gutenbergbeuys

@vertreter_rei
@perimeterbooks
@interartparis
@artbook


232
6
3 months ago

OUT NOW: Cooking Sections: Waves Lost to Sea

Waves Lost at Sea traces the evolving practice of Cooking Sections—founded in London by Daniel Fernández Pascual and Alon Schwabe—whose work spans visual arts, architecture, and ecology. Since 2013, they have been investigating anthropogenic infrastructures, industrial food systems, and human-made climates: from artificially colored farmed salmon and drained buffalo wetlands to ocean-filtering oysters and Sicilian tomatoes outlawed under EU regulations. Their research-based practice exposes the legal, environmental, and metabolic struggles behind what ends up on our plates, while simultaneously working to create prospects for the future.

This monograph brings together six newly commissioned essays alongside an extensive series of images with detailed captions and reflective annotations. The book traverses legal fictions, queer ecologies, disappearing landscapes, multispecies entanglements, and speculative tastes. Through these layered investigations, Waves Lost at Sea invites readers to rethink food cultures and agricultural imaginaries—decentering humans at both microscopic and planetary scales.

@cookingsections was nominated for the 2021 Turner Prize, received the Special Prize at the 2019 Future Generation Art Prize, and was shortlisted that same year for the Visible Award for socially engaged artistic practices.

Co-published with @fundacionbotin the book appears in conjunction with the exhibition of the same name—Cooking Sections’ first show in Spain—which runs at @centrobotin , Santander, from October 2025 to February 2026.

Designed by Malin Gewinner

With contributions by Cooking Sections, @nereacalvillo , Sria Chatterjee, @ros_l_gray , @yayoherrerol , @theo_issaias , Mari Margil, @barbararmunoz

@gutenbergbeuys

@vertreter_rei
@perimeterbooks
@interartparis
@artbook


232
6
3 months ago

OUT NOW: Cooking Sections: Waves Lost to Sea

Waves Lost at Sea traces the evolving practice of Cooking Sections—founded in London by Daniel Fernández Pascual and Alon Schwabe—whose work spans visual arts, architecture, and ecology. Since 2013, they have been investigating anthropogenic infrastructures, industrial food systems, and human-made climates: from artificially colored farmed salmon and drained buffalo wetlands to ocean-filtering oysters and Sicilian tomatoes outlawed under EU regulations. Their research-based practice exposes the legal, environmental, and metabolic struggles behind what ends up on our plates, while simultaneously working to create prospects for the future.

This monograph brings together six newly commissioned essays alongside an extensive series of images with detailed captions and reflective annotations. The book traverses legal fictions, queer ecologies, disappearing landscapes, multispecies entanglements, and speculative tastes. Through these layered investigations, Waves Lost at Sea invites readers to rethink food cultures and agricultural imaginaries—decentering humans at both microscopic and planetary scales.

@cookingsections was nominated for the 2021 Turner Prize, received the Special Prize at the 2019 Future Generation Art Prize, and was shortlisted that same year for the Visible Award for socially engaged artistic practices.

Co-published with @fundacionbotin the book appears in conjunction with the exhibition of the same name—Cooking Sections’ first show in Spain—which runs at @centrobotin , Santander, from October 2025 to February 2026.

Designed by Malin Gewinner

With contributions by Cooking Sections, @nereacalvillo , Sria Chatterjee, @ros_l_gray , @yayoherrerol , @theo_issaias , Mari Margil, @barbararmunoz

@gutenbergbeuys

@vertreter_rei
@perimeterbooks
@interartparis
@artbook


232
6
3 months ago

OUT NOW: Cooking Sections: Waves Lost to Sea

Waves Lost at Sea traces the evolving practice of Cooking Sections—founded in London by Daniel Fernández Pascual and Alon Schwabe—whose work spans visual arts, architecture, and ecology. Since 2013, they have been investigating anthropogenic infrastructures, industrial food systems, and human-made climates: from artificially colored farmed salmon and drained buffalo wetlands to ocean-filtering oysters and Sicilian tomatoes outlawed under EU regulations. Their research-based practice exposes the legal, environmental, and metabolic struggles behind what ends up on our plates, while simultaneously working to create prospects for the future.

This monograph brings together six newly commissioned essays alongside an extensive series of images with detailed captions and reflective annotations. The book traverses legal fictions, queer ecologies, disappearing landscapes, multispecies entanglements, and speculative tastes. Through these layered investigations, Waves Lost at Sea invites readers to rethink food cultures and agricultural imaginaries—decentering humans at both microscopic and planetary scales.

@cookingsections was nominated for the 2021 Turner Prize, received the Special Prize at the 2019 Future Generation Art Prize, and was shortlisted that same year for the Visible Award for socially engaged artistic practices.

Co-published with @fundacionbotin the book appears in conjunction with the exhibition of the same name—Cooking Sections’ first show in Spain—which runs at @centrobotin , Santander, from October 2025 to February 2026.

Designed by Malin Gewinner

With contributions by Cooking Sections, @nereacalvillo , Sria Chatterjee, @ros_l_gray , @yayoherrerol , @theo_issaias , Mari Margil, @barbararmunoz

@gutenbergbeuys

@vertreter_rei
@perimeterbooks
@interartparis
@artbook


232
6
3 months ago

OUT NOW: Cooking Sections: Waves Lost to Sea

Waves Lost at Sea traces the evolving practice of Cooking Sections—founded in London by Daniel Fernández Pascual and Alon Schwabe—whose work spans visual arts, architecture, and ecology. Since 2013, they have been investigating anthropogenic infrastructures, industrial food systems, and human-made climates: from artificially colored farmed salmon and drained buffalo wetlands to ocean-filtering oysters and Sicilian tomatoes outlawed under EU regulations. Their research-based practice exposes the legal, environmental, and metabolic struggles behind what ends up on our plates, while simultaneously working to create prospects for the future.

This monograph brings together six newly commissioned essays alongside an extensive series of images with detailed captions and reflective annotations. The book traverses legal fictions, queer ecologies, disappearing landscapes, multispecies entanglements, and speculative tastes. Through these layered investigations, Waves Lost at Sea invites readers to rethink food cultures and agricultural imaginaries—decentering humans at both microscopic and planetary scales.

@cookingsections was nominated for the 2021 Turner Prize, received the Special Prize at the 2019 Future Generation Art Prize, and was shortlisted that same year for the Visible Award for socially engaged artistic practices.

Co-published with @fundacionbotin the book appears in conjunction with the exhibition of the same name—Cooking Sections’ first show in Spain—which runs at @centrobotin , Santander, from October 2025 to February 2026.

Designed by Malin Gewinner

With contributions by Cooking Sections, @nereacalvillo , Sria Chatterjee, @ros_l_gray , @yayoherrerol , @theo_issaias , Mari Margil, @barbararmunoz

@gutenbergbeuys

@vertreter_rei
@perimeterbooks
@interartparis
@artbook


232
6
3 months ago

OUT NOW: Cooking Sections: Waves Lost to Sea

Waves Lost at Sea traces the evolving practice of Cooking Sections—founded in London by Daniel Fernández Pascual and Alon Schwabe—whose work spans visual arts, architecture, and ecology. Since 2013, they have been investigating anthropogenic infrastructures, industrial food systems, and human-made climates: from artificially colored farmed salmon and drained buffalo wetlands to ocean-filtering oysters and Sicilian tomatoes outlawed under EU regulations. Their research-based practice exposes the legal, environmental, and metabolic struggles behind what ends up on our plates, while simultaneously working to create prospects for the future.

This monograph brings together six newly commissioned essays alongside an extensive series of images with detailed captions and reflective annotations. The book traverses legal fictions, queer ecologies, disappearing landscapes, multispecies entanglements, and speculative tastes. Through these layered investigations, Waves Lost at Sea invites readers to rethink food cultures and agricultural imaginaries—decentering humans at both microscopic and planetary scales.

@cookingsections was nominated for the 2021 Turner Prize, received the Special Prize at the 2019 Future Generation Art Prize, and was shortlisted that same year for the Visible Award for socially engaged artistic practices.

Co-published with @fundacionbotin the book appears in conjunction with the exhibition of the same name—Cooking Sections’ first show in Spain—which runs at @centrobotin , Santander, from October 2025 to February 2026.

Designed by Malin Gewinner

With contributions by Cooking Sections, @nereacalvillo , Sria Chatterjee, @ros_l_gray , @yayoherrerol , @theo_issaias , Mari Margil, @barbararmunoz

@gutenbergbeuys

@vertreter_rei
@perimeterbooks
@interartparis
@artbook


232
6
3 months ago

OUT NOW: Cooking Sections: Waves Lost to Sea

Waves Lost at Sea traces the evolving practice of Cooking Sections—founded in London by Daniel Fernández Pascual and Alon Schwabe—whose work spans visual arts, architecture, and ecology. Since 2013, they have been investigating anthropogenic infrastructures, industrial food systems, and human-made climates: from artificially colored farmed salmon and drained buffalo wetlands to ocean-filtering oysters and Sicilian tomatoes outlawed under EU regulations. Their research-based practice exposes the legal, environmental, and metabolic struggles behind what ends up on our plates, while simultaneously working to create prospects for the future.

This monograph brings together six newly commissioned essays alongside an extensive series of images with detailed captions and reflective annotations. The book traverses legal fictions, queer ecologies, disappearing landscapes, multispecies entanglements, and speculative tastes. Through these layered investigations, Waves Lost at Sea invites readers to rethink food cultures and agricultural imaginaries—decentering humans at both microscopic and planetary scales.

@cookingsections was nominated for the 2021 Turner Prize, received the Special Prize at the 2019 Future Generation Art Prize, and was shortlisted that same year for the Visible Award for socially engaged artistic practices.

Co-published with @fundacionbotin the book appears in conjunction with the exhibition of the same name—Cooking Sections’ first show in Spain—which runs at @centrobotin , Santander, from October 2025 to February 2026.

Designed by Malin Gewinner

With contributions by Cooking Sections, @nereacalvillo , Sria Chatterjee, @ros_l_gray , @yayoherrerol , @theo_issaias , Mari Margil, @barbararmunoz

@gutenbergbeuys

@vertreter_rei
@perimeterbooks
@interartparis
@artbook


232
6
3 months ago

OUT NOW: Cooking Sections: Waves Lost to Sea

Waves Lost at Sea traces the evolving practice of Cooking Sections—founded in London by Daniel Fernández Pascual and Alon Schwabe—whose work spans visual arts, architecture, and ecology. Since 2013, they have been investigating anthropogenic infrastructures, industrial food systems, and human-made climates: from artificially colored farmed salmon and drained buffalo wetlands to ocean-filtering oysters and Sicilian tomatoes outlawed under EU regulations. Their research-based practice exposes the legal, environmental, and metabolic struggles behind what ends up on our plates, while simultaneously working to create prospects for the future.

This monograph brings together six newly commissioned essays alongside an extensive series of images with detailed captions and reflective annotations. The book traverses legal fictions, queer ecologies, disappearing landscapes, multispecies entanglements, and speculative tastes. Through these layered investigations, Waves Lost at Sea invites readers to rethink food cultures and agricultural imaginaries—decentering humans at both microscopic and planetary scales.

@cookingsections was nominated for the 2021 Turner Prize, received the Special Prize at the 2019 Future Generation Art Prize, and was shortlisted that same year for the Visible Award for socially engaged artistic practices.

Co-published with @fundacionbotin the book appears in conjunction with the exhibition of the same name—Cooking Sections’ first show in Spain—which runs at @centrobotin , Santander, from October 2025 to February 2026.

Designed by Malin Gewinner

With contributions by Cooking Sections, @nereacalvillo , Sria Chatterjee, @ros_l_gray , @yayoherrerol , @theo_issaias , Mari Margil, @barbararmunoz

@gutenbergbeuys

@vertreter_rei
@perimeterbooks
@interartparis
@artbook


232
6
3 months ago

OUT NOW: Cooking Sections: Waves Lost to Sea

Waves Lost at Sea traces the evolving practice of Cooking Sections—founded in London by Daniel Fernández Pascual and Alon Schwabe—whose work spans visual arts, architecture, and ecology. Since 2013, they have been investigating anthropogenic infrastructures, industrial food systems, and human-made climates: from artificially colored farmed salmon and drained buffalo wetlands to ocean-filtering oysters and Sicilian tomatoes outlawed under EU regulations. Their research-based practice exposes the legal, environmental, and metabolic struggles behind what ends up on our plates, while simultaneously working to create prospects for the future.

This monograph brings together six newly commissioned essays alongside an extensive series of images with detailed captions and reflective annotations. The book traverses legal fictions, queer ecologies, disappearing landscapes, multispecies entanglements, and speculative tastes. Through these layered investigations, Waves Lost at Sea invites readers to rethink food cultures and agricultural imaginaries—decentering humans at both microscopic and planetary scales.

@cookingsections was nominated for the 2021 Turner Prize, received the Special Prize at the 2019 Future Generation Art Prize, and was shortlisted that same year for the Visible Award for socially engaged artistic practices.

Co-published with @fundacionbotin the book appears in conjunction with the exhibition of the same name—Cooking Sections’ first show in Spain—which runs at @centrobotin , Santander, from October 2025 to February 2026.

Designed by Malin Gewinner

With contributions by Cooking Sections, @nereacalvillo , Sria Chatterjee, @ros_l_gray , @yayoherrerol , @theo_issaias , Mari Margil, @barbararmunoz

@gutenbergbeuys

@vertreter_rei
@perimeterbooks
@interartparis
@artbook


232
6
3 months ago

OUT NOW: Cooking Sections: Waves Lost to Sea

Waves Lost at Sea traces the evolving practice of Cooking Sections—founded in London by Daniel Fernández Pascual and Alon Schwabe—whose work spans visual arts, architecture, and ecology. Since 2013, they have been investigating anthropogenic infrastructures, industrial food systems, and human-made climates: from artificially colored farmed salmon and drained buffalo wetlands to ocean-filtering oysters and Sicilian tomatoes outlawed under EU regulations. Their research-based practice exposes the legal, environmental, and metabolic struggles behind what ends up on our plates, while simultaneously working to create prospects for the future.

This monograph brings together six newly commissioned essays alongside an extensive series of images with detailed captions and reflective annotations. The book traverses legal fictions, queer ecologies, disappearing landscapes, multispecies entanglements, and speculative tastes. Through these layered investigations, Waves Lost at Sea invites readers to rethink food cultures and agricultural imaginaries—decentering humans at both microscopic and planetary scales.

@cookingsections was nominated for the 2021 Turner Prize, received the Special Prize at the 2019 Future Generation Art Prize, and was shortlisted that same year for the Visible Award for socially engaged artistic practices.

Co-published with @fundacionbotin the book appears in conjunction with the exhibition of the same name—Cooking Sections’ first show in Spain—which runs at @centrobotin , Santander, from October 2025 to February 2026.

Designed by Malin Gewinner

With contributions by Cooking Sections, @nereacalvillo , Sria Chatterjee, @ros_l_gray , @yayoherrerol , @theo_issaias , Mari Margil, @barbararmunoz

@gutenbergbeuys

@vertreter_rei
@perimeterbooks
@interartparis
@artbook


232
6
3 months ago

What happens when performance meets everyday activism? In this episode of The Process, Somerset House Studios' artists, @cookingsections’ Daniel Fernández Pascual and Alon Schwabe explore the blurry boundaries between fact and fiction in artmaking.

They hear from Paula Serafini, Senior Lecturer in Creative and Cultural Industries at Queen Mary, University of London, and Liv Pennington and Michele Shonfield, two of the ministers involved in the installation, on how art can empower people to speak out on issues that affect them.

Produced by:@arlieadlington


149
6
3 months ago

Waves Lost at Sea is now open at Centro Botín, Santander, through 1 March 2026.

For centuries, coastal communities have read waves for navigation, nourishment, and joy. But dredging, sand mining, and port construction have reshaped shorelines and erased some of the world’s most remarkable breaks, from Mundaka on the Basque coast to the phosphate port of El Marsa in Western Sahara, and apartheid-era beach towns in Cape St Francis, South Africa. In Peru, Azores, Baja California, or Hawai’i, breakwaters and speculation displace communities and erase more-than-human habitats. In the name of progress, these violent processes are logged in wave height, shoreline retreat, GDP flows, and no-go swim zones. Even if waves constantly appear and disappear, some are now permanently lost, leaving traces of extractivism and seabed scars, as well as vanished underwater ecologies.

Waves Lost at Sea traces a geography of disappearance through eleven breaks. Reconstructed with scientists from GeoOcean, University of Cantabria, their height, speed, and pulse are translated into a sound composition by Duval Timothy, continuously activated by performers within an installation of suspended springs.

Waves are mourned through protests, lawsuits, oral histories, and fading beach signs, making the struggle over waves inseparable from the struggle over land and livelihood. Yet new forms of custodianship are emerging, from Chile’s Espacios Costeros Marinos de Pueblos Originarios to Peru’s Ley de Rompientes to Brazil’s recognition of waves as entities with legal personhood andCantabria’s proposed 7-wave protected surf zone.

Waves Lost at Sea is a performative installation by Cooking Sections, commissioned by Centro Botín, 2025. Curated by Bárbara Rodríguez Muñoz.
Music: Duval Timothy
Performers: Maider G. Etxegibel, Rebeca García Celdrán, Lucía López Madrazo, Léa Misseri, Laura Ramirez Ashbaugh, Julia Zac, Zhenxiang Zhao
Cooking Sections studio team: Max Cooper-Clark, Sofía Yáñez Perteagudo, Rosa Whiteley
Wave research: GeoOcean
Structural engineering: Manja van de Worp
Fabrication: Acualé, Isocor, Muelles Zaldua
Photo: Lourdes Cabrera

@centrobotin #santander #lasolasperdidas


289
11
6 months ago

Waves Lost at Sea is now open at Centro Botín, Santander, through 1 March 2026.

For centuries, coastal communities have read waves for navigation, nourishment, and joy. But dredging, sand mining, and port construction have reshaped shorelines and erased some of the world’s most remarkable breaks, from Mundaka on the Basque coast to the phosphate port of El Marsa in Western Sahara, and apartheid-era beach towns in Cape St Francis, South Africa. In Peru, Azores, Baja California, or Hawai’i, breakwaters and speculation displace communities and erase more-than-human habitats. In the name of progress, these violent processes are logged in wave height, shoreline retreat, GDP flows, and no-go swim zones. Even if waves constantly appear and disappear, some are now permanently lost, leaving traces of extractivism and seabed scars, as well as vanished underwater ecologies.

Waves Lost at Sea traces a geography of disappearance through eleven breaks. Reconstructed with scientists from GeoOcean, University of Cantabria, their height, speed, and pulse are translated into a sound composition by Duval Timothy, continuously activated by performers within an installation of suspended springs.

Waves are mourned through protests, lawsuits, oral histories, and fading beach signs, making the struggle over waves inseparable from the struggle over land and livelihood. Yet new forms of custodianship are emerging, from Chile’s Espacios Costeros Marinos de Pueblos Originarios to Peru’s Ley de Rompientes to Brazil’s recognition of waves as entities with legal personhood andCantabria’s proposed 7-wave protected surf zone.

Waves Lost at Sea is a performative installation by Cooking Sections, commissioned by Centro Botín, 2025. Curated by Bárbara Rodríguez Muñoz.
Music: Duval Timothy
Performers: Maider G. Etxegibel, Rebeca García Celdrán, Lucía López Madrazo, Léa Misseri, Laura Ramirez Ashbaugh, Julia Zac, Zhenxiang Zhao
Cooking Sections studio team: Max Cooper-Clark, Sofía Yáñez Perteagudo, Rosa Whiteley
Wave research: GeoOcean
Structural engineering: Manja van de Worp
Fabrication: Acualé, Isocor, Muelles Zaldua
Photo: Lourdes Cabrera

@centrobotin #santander #lasolasperdidas


289
11
6 months ago

Waves Lost at Sea is now open at Centro Botín, Santander, through 1 March 2026.

For centuries, coastal communities have read waves for navigation, nourishment, and joy. But dredging, sand mining, and port construction have reshaped shorelines and erased some of the world’s most remarkable breaks, from Mundaka on the Basque coast to the phosphate port of El Marsa in Western Sahara, and apartheid-era beach towns in Cape St Francis, South Africa. In Peru, Azores, Baja California, or Hawai’i, breakwaters and speculation displace communities and erase more-than-human habitats. In the name of progress, these violent processes are logged in wave height, shoreline retreat, GDP flows, and no-go swim zones. Even if waves constantly appear and disappear, some are now permanently lost, leaving traces of extractivism and seabed scars, as well as vanished underwater ecologies.

Waves Lost at Sea traces a geography of disappearance through eleven breaks. Reconstructed with scientists from GeoOcean, University of Cantabria, their height, speed, and pulse are translated into a sound composition by Duval Timothy, continuously activated by performers within an installation of suspended springs.

Waves are mourned through protests, lawsuits, oral histories, and fading beach signs, making the struggle over waves inseparable from the struggle over land and livelihood. Yet new forms of custodianship are emerging, from Chile’s Espacios Costeros Marinos de Pueblos Originarios to Peru’s Ley de Rompientes to Brazil’s recognition of waves as entities with legal personhood andCantabria’s proposed 7-wave protected surf zone.

Waves Lost at Sea is a performative installation by Cooking Sections, commissioned by Centro Botín, 2025. Curated by Bárbara Rodríguez Muñoz.
Music: Duval Timothy
Performers: Maider G. Etxegibel, Rebeca García Celdrán, Lucía López Madrazo, Léa Misseri, Laura Ramirez Ashbaugh, Julia Zac, Zhenxiang Zhao
Cooking Sections studio team: Max Cooper-Clark, Sofía Yáñez Perteagudo, Rosa Whiteley
Wave research: GeoOcean
Structural engineering: Manja van de Worp
Fabrication: Acualé, Isocor, Muelles Zaldua
Photo: Lourdes Cabrera

@centrobotin #santander #lasolasperdidas


289
11
6 months ago

This Saturday 27th September, come and wallow with us!
The water buffalo herders of Istanbul’s wetlands invite you to the 4th Manda Festivali (Water Buffalo Festival), hosted this year in Akpınar village. An annual festival we started in 2022 continues to celebrate the presence and permanence of buffalo ecologies in the city’s postindustrial pastoralist wetlands, despite being increasingly encroached by urbanisation and infrastructure.
This edition, organised as part of Water Buffalo Commons, CLIMAVORE x Jameel at RCA with Eyüpsultan municipality, MSA, Ariste and Anatolian Grasslands, gathers herders, musicians, environmentalists, artists, biologists, cheese makers alongside the public. If you are in Istanbul, join us for metabolic walks, workshops, a buffalo-herder portrait competition, and tastings of buffalo milk desserts.

More details and shuttles link in bio 🚀

Photography: Ci Demi @ci_demi
Graphics: An Endless Supply @anendlesssupply
@weareclimavore @communityjameel @royalcollegeofart @rca_soa
#MandaFestivali #WaterBuffaloCommons #istanbul


272
1
7 months ago

This Saturday 27th September, come and wallow with us!
The water buffalo herders of Istanbul’s wetlands invite you to the 4th Manda Festivali (Water Buffalo Festival), hosted this year in Akpınar village. An annual festival we started in 2022 continues to celebrate the presence and permanence of buffalo ecologies in the city’s postindustrial pastoralist wetlands, despite being increasingly encroached by urbanisation and infrastructure.
This edition, organised as part of Water Buffalo Commons, CLIMAVORE x Jameel at RCA with Eyüpsultan municipality, MSA, Ariste and Anatolian Grasslands, gathers herders, musicians, environmentalists, artists, biologists, cheese makers alongside the public. If you are in Istanbul, join us for metabolic walks, workshops, a buffalo-herder portrait competition, and tastings of buffalo milk desserts.

More details and shuttles link in bio 🚀

Photography: Ci Demi @ci_demi
Graphics: An Endless Supply @anendlesssupply
@weareclimavore @communityjameel @royalcollegeofart @rca_soa
#MandaFestivali #WaterBuffaloCommons #istanbul


272
1
7 months ago

This Saturday 27th September, come and wallow with us!
The water buffalo herders of Istanbul’s wetlands invite you to the 4th Manda Festivali (Water Buffalo Festival), hosted this year in Akpınar village. An annual festival we started in 2022 continues to celebrate the presence and permanence of buffalo ecologies in the city’s postindustrial pastoralist wetlands, despite being increasingly encroached by urbanisation and infrastructure.
This edition, organised as part of Water Buffalo Commons, CLIMAVORE x Jameel at RCA with Eyüpsultan municipality, MSA, Ariste and Anatolian Grasslands, gathers herders, musicians, environmentalists, artists, biologists, cheese makers alongside the public. If you are in Istanbul, join us for metabolic walks, workshops, a buffalo-herder portrait competition, and tastings of buffalo milk desserts.

More details and shuttles link in bio 🚀

Photography: Ci Demi @ci_demi
Graphics: An Endless Supply @anendlesssupply
@weareclimavore @communityjameel @royalcollegeofart @rca_soa
#MandaFestivali #WaterBuffaloCommons #istanbul


272
1
7 months ago

This Saturday 27th September, come and wallow with us!
The water buffalo herders of Istanbul’s wetlands invite you to the 4th Manda Festivali (Water Buffalo Festival), hosted this year in Akpınar village. An annual festival we started in 2022 continues to celebrate the presence and permanence of buffalo ecologies in the city’s postindustrial pastoralist wetlands, despite being increasingly encroached by urbanisation and infrastructure.
This edition, organised as part of Water Buffalo Commons, CLIMAVORE x Jameel at RCA with Eyüpsultan municipality, MSA, Ariste and Anatolian Grasslands, gathers herders, musicians, environmentalists, artists, biologists, cheese makers alongside the public. If you are in Istanbul, join us for metabolic walks, workshops, a buffalo-herder portrait competition, and tastings of buffalo milk desserts.

More details and shuttles link in bio 🚀

Photography: Ci Demi @ci_demi
Graphics: An Endless Supply @anendlesssupply
@weareclimavore @communityjameel @royalcollegeofart @rca_soa
#MandaFestivali #WaterBuffaloCommons #istanbul


272
1
7 months ago

This Saturday 27th September, come and wallow with us!
The water buffalo herders of Istanbul’s wetlands invite you to the 4th Manda Festivali (Water Buffalo Festival), hosted this year in Akpınar village. An annual festival we started in 2022 continues to celebrate the presence and permanence of buffalo ecologies in the city’s postindustrial pastoralist wetlands, despite being increasingly encroached by urbanisation and infrastructure.
This edition, organised as part of Water Buffalo Commons, CLIMAVORE x Jameel at RCA with Eyüpsultan municipality, MSA, Ariste and Anatolian Grasslands, gathers herders, musicians, environmentalists, artists, biologists, cheese makers alongside the public. If you are in Istanbul, join us for metabolic walks, workshops, a buffalo-herder portrait competition, and tastings of buffalo milk desserts.

More details and shuttles link in bio 🚀

Photography: Ci Demi @ci_demi
Graphics: An Endless Supply @anendlesssupply
@weareclimavore @communityjameel @royalcollegeofart @rca_soa
#MandaFestivali #WaterBuffaloCommons #istanbul


272
1
7 months ago

This Saturday 27th September, come and wallow with us!
The water buffalo herders of Istanbul’s wetlands invite you to the 4th Manda Festivali (Water Buffalo Festival), hosted this year in Akpınar village. An annual festival we started in 2022 continues to celebrate the presence and permanence of buffalo ecologies in the city’s postindustrial pastoralist wetlands, despite being increasingly encroached by urbanisation and infrastructure.
This edition, organised as part of Water Buffalo Commons, CLIMAVORE x Jameel at RCA with Eyüpsultan municipality, MSA, Ariste and Anatolian Grasslands, gathers herders, musicians, environmentalists, artists, biologists, cheese makers alongside the public. If you are in Istanbul, join us for metabolic walks, workshops, a buffalo-herder portrait competition, and tastings of buffalo milk desserts.

More details and shuttles link in bio 🚀

Photography: Ci Demi @ci_demi
Graphics: An Endless Supply @anendlesssupply
@weareclimavore @communityjameel @royalcollegeofart @rca_soa
#MandaFestivali #WaterBuffaloCommons #istanbul


272
1
7 months ago

This Saturday 27th September, come and wallow with us!
The water buffalo herders of Istanbul’s wetlands invite you to the 4th Manda Festivali (Water Buffalo Festival), hosted this year in Akpınar village. An annual festival we started in 2022 continues to celebrate the presence and permanence of buffalo ecologies in the city’s postindustrial pastoralist wetlands, despite being increasingly encroached by urbanisation and infrastructure.
This edition, organised as part of Water Buffalo Commons, CLIMAVORE x Jameel at RCA with Eyüpsultan municipality, MSA, Ariste and Anatolian Grasslands, gathers herders, musicians, environmentalists, artists, biologists, cheese makers alongside the public. If you are in Istanbul, join us for metabolic walks, workshops, a buffalo-herder portrait competition, and tastings of buffalo milk desserts.

More details and shuttles link in bio 🚀

Photography: Ci Demi @ci_demi
Graphics: An Endless Supply @anendlesssupply
@weareclimavore @communityjameel @royalcollegeofart @rca_soa
#MandaFestivali #WaterBuffaloCommons #istanbul


272
1
7 months ago

This Saturday 27th September, come and wallow with us!
The water buffalo herders of Istanbul’s wetlands invite you to the 4th Manda Festivali (Water Buffalo Festival), hosted this year in Akpınar village. An annual festival we started in 2022 continues to celebrate the presence and permanence of buffalo ecologies in the city’s postindustrial pastoralist wetlands, despite being increasingly encroached by urbanisation and infrastructure.
This edition, organised as part of Water Buffalo Commons, CLIMAVORE x Jameel at RCA with Eyüpsultan municipality, MSA, Ariste and Anatolian Grasslands, gathers herders, musicians, environmentalists, artists, biologists, cheese makers alongside the public. If you are in Istanbul, join us for metabolic walks, workshops, a buffalo-herder portrait competition, and tastings of buffalo milk desserts.

More details and shuttles link in bio 🚀

Photography: Ci Demi @ci_demi
Graphics: An Endless Supply @anendlesssupply
@weareclimavore @communityjameel @royalcollegeofart @rca_soa
#MandaFestivali #WaterBuffaloCommons #istanbul


272
1
7 months ago

Seen sewage spilling near your street?
Took a swim and ended up ill?
Smelled something foul at the beach?
The Ministry of Sewers is now open to the public. Come to the old Customs House in Folkestone Harbour and share your experience of living with sewage. A civic space to speak out and bring evidence of water pollution, rising bills, blocked drains, cancelled bookings, impossible swims, and disappearing coastlines.
Taking inspiration from Dennis Howell, the UK’s Minister for Drought, Floods and Snow in 1976, the Ministry is rather a platform to voice your concerns, one that listens, documents, and responds to coastal water mismanagement.
Book your appointment with the Minister or drop by during opening hours (Mo-Sun 11:00-17:00)
Link in bio.

Sewers Ministers: Nicola Hayden, Kirsty Hogben, Gordon Jessop, Liv Pennington, Patricia Rolfe, Michele Shonfield, Joy Thomas
Cooking Sections Team: Max Cooper Clark, Rosa Whiteley, Remi Kuforiji, Alisha Raman
CF Project Manager: Liv Pennington
Legal: Jemima Lovatt
Folkestone installation team: Form And Matter
Fabrication: Tareg Al-Zamel

With Thanks to: Heather Bishop, Peter Blach, Mitchell Bloomfield, Susan Churchill, Fish Legal, Folkestone Sea Swimmers, Dave Harvey, Samantha Hughes (Holistic Water for Horticulture), Hythe Dippers, Sarah Kennett and Mallydams Wood rehabilitation staff, Kent Archives (Kent History and Archive Centre), Owen Leyshon, Helen Lindon, Jim Martin, Tom Reynolds, Mark Rose, Sewer Rage (Patricia Rolfe, Sarah Thompson, John Thurgood), SOS Whitstable, Surfers Against Sewage, Hugo Tagholm, and the residents of Folkestone, Hythe, and Romney Marsh for sharing their experiences, evidence and stories of living with the sewers.

@creativefstone

#MinistryOfSewers #FolkestoneTriennial #RightToSwim#SewageJustice


351
10
9 months ago

Seen sewage spilling near your street?
Took a swim and ended up ill?
Smelled something foul at the beach?
The Ministry of Sewers is now open to the public. Come to the old Customs House in Folkestone Harbour and share your experience of living with sewage. A civic space to speak out and bring evidence of water pollution, rising bills, blocked drains, cancelled bookings, impossible swims, and disappearing coastlines.
Taking inspiration from Dennis Howell, the UK’s Minister for Drought, Floods and Snow in 1976, the Ministry is rather a platform to voice your concerns, one that listens, documents, and responds to coastal water mismanagement.
Book your appointment with the Minister or drop by during opening hours (Mo-Sun 11:00-17:00)
Link in bio.

Sewers Ministers: Nicola Hayden, Kirsty Hogben, Gordon Jessop, Liv Pennington, Patricia Rolfe, Michele Shonfield, Joy Thomas
Cooking Sections Team: Max Cooper Clark, Rosa Whiteley, Remi Kuforiji, Alisha Raman
CF Project Manager: Liv Pennington
Legal: Jemima Lovatt
Folkestone installation team: Form And Matter
Fabrication: Tareg Al-Zamel

With Thanks to: Heather Bishop, Peter Blach, Mitchell Bloomfield, Susan Churchill, Fish Legal, Folkestone Sea Swimmers, Dave Harvey, Samantha Hughes (Holistic Water for Horticulture), Hythe Dippers, Sarah Kennett and Mallydams Wood rehabilitation staff, Kent Archives (Kent History and Archive Centre), Owen Leyshon, Helen Lindon, Jim Martin, Tom Reynolds, Mark Rose, Sewer Rage (Patricia Rolfe, Sarah Thompson, John Thurgood), SOS Whitstable, Surfers Against Sewage, Hugo Tagholm, and the residents of Folkestone, Hythe, and Romney Marsh for sharing their experiences, evidence and stories of living with the sewers.

@creativefstone

#MinistryOfSewers #FolkestoneTriennial #RightToSwim#SewageJustice


351
10
9 months ago

💧MINISTRY of SEWERS💧
—Share your sewage story
(link in bio)

In July 2025, Folkestone is opening the UK’s first Ministry of Sewers—a civic space to tackle coastal pollution and fight for a clean, swimmable sea year-round. Located in the old Customs House, the Ministry listens, amplifies voices, documents grievances, and mobilises collective action against sewage dumping, agrochemical runoff, and coastal degradation. Open to all, the Ministry invites people to share experiences of murky tides, health incidents, banned beach days, contaminated swims, rising water bills, and broader ecological disruption.

The Ministry reclaims the older meaning of “sewer” as a vital ecological network. Long before privatisation turned sewers into toxic pipelines, marsh sewers fed fields and linked freshwater springs, chalk aquifers, human bodies and coastal wetlands. Today, deregulation, crumbling infrastructure, and intensified storms have made raw sewage a permanent fixture along the coast.

Inspired by the appointment of Dennis Howell as 1976 Minister for Drought (later Minister for Floods and Snow), the Ministry of Sewers makes room for a different kind of civic action. It forms a gathering place for wild swimmers, farmers, schoolchildren, birdwatchers, scientists, and residents to reclaim the coastal commons.

Evidence and testimonies are being collected throughout the Folkestone Triennial into a growing Log of Grievances—a living archive of public nuisance and collective resistance.

Stay tuned to book an in-person session with the Ministers from its public opening on 19 July.

@creativefstone @cookingsections
Cooking Sections Team: Max Cooper-Clark, Rosa Whiteley, Remi Kuforiji, Alisha Raman
Curated by Sorcha Carey
Creative Folkestone project manager: Liv Pennington
Legal: Jemima Lovatt
#FolkestoneTriennial
#MinistryOfSewers
#Folkestone #kent


212
8
11 months ago


View Instagram Stories in Secret

The Instagram Story Viewer is an easy tool that lets you secretly watch and save Instagram stories, videos, photos, or IGTV. With this service, you can download content and enjoy it offline whenever you like. If you find something interesting on Instagram that you’d like to check out later or want to view stories while staying anonymous, our Viewer is perfect for you. Anonstories offers an excellent solution for keeping your identity hidden. Instagram first launched the Stories feature in August 2023, which was quickly adopted by other platforms due to its engaging, time-sensitive format. Stories let users share quick updates, whether photos, videos, or selfies, enhanced with text, emojis, or filters, and are visible for only 24 hours. This limited time frame creates high engagement compared to regular posts. In today’s world, Stories are one of the most popular ways to connect and communicate on social media. However, when you view a Story, the creator can see your name in their viewer list, which may be a privacy concern. What if you wish to browse Stories without being noticed? Here’s where Anonstories becomes useful. It allows you to watch public Instagram content without revealing your identity. Simply enter the username of the profile you’re curious about, and the tool will display their latest Stories. Features of Anonstories Viewer: - Anonymous Browsing: Watch Stories without showing up on the viewer list. - No Account Needed: View public content without signing up for an Instagram account. - Content Download: Save any Stories content directly to your device for offline use. - View Highlights: Access Instagram Highlights, even beyond the 24-hour window. - Repost Monitoring: Track the reposts or engagement levels on Stories for personal profiles. Limitations: - This tool works only with public accounts; private accounts remain inaccessible. Benefits: - Privacy-Friendly: Watch any Instagram content without being noticed. - Simple and Easy: No app installation or registration required. - Exclusive Tools: Download and manage content in ways Instagram doesn’t offer.

Advantages of Anonstories

Explore IG Stories Privately

Keep track of Instagram updates discreetly while protecting your privacy and staying anonymous.


Private Instagram Viewer

View profiles and photos anonymously with ease using the Private Profile Viewer.


Story Viewer for Free

This free tool allows you to view Instagram Stories anonymously, ensuring your activity remains hidden from the story uploader.

Frequently asked questions

 
Anonymity

Anonstories lets users view Instagram stories without alerting the creator.

 
Device Compatibility

Works seamlessly on iOS, Android, Windows, macOS, and modern browsers like Chrome and Safari.

 
Safety and Privacy

Prioritizes secure, anonymous browsing without requiring login credentials.

 
No Registration

Users can view public stories by simply entering a username—no account needed.

 
Supported Formats

Downloads photos (JPEG) and videos (MP4) with ease.

 
Cost

The service is free to use.

 
Private Accounts

Content from private accounts can only be accessed by followers.

 
File Usage

Files are for personal or educational use only and must comply with copyright rules.

 
How It Works

Enter a public username to view or download stories. The service generates direct links for saving content locally.