A cartography of kinship, a living and growing archive of who we care about, who we forget, and who is left behind.
The world is not built on isolation: it is stitched together, thread by thread, by acts of care. Web of Care invites you into this intricate, pulsing fabric of interdependence, where humans, nonhumans and the unseen forces of the planet are bound together in an uneasy choreography of survival, reciprocity and abandonment.
Caring is not sentimental; it is feral, messy and urgent. It is love, attention, relationship, but also absence, extraction, indifference. Caring means recognizing entanglement: noticing the spinning spider, the decaying mushrooms, the river gasping for breath.
Like a ritual of connection, the installation unfolds in three movements: the visitors enter the narrative, absorbing the vastness of interspecies relations, the silent violence of forgetting, and the radical act of noticing. Here, curation becomes visible. The visitors select threads, each a statement of how they define care, and weave them into an interactive map of life. With each touch, the web thickens, revealing an ecosystem of affects and omissions, of over-loved species and phantom ones. What if it was care, and not money, that shaped society? What if these species disappeared tomorrow? The problem persists.
As the installation evolves, it becomes a landscape of collective thinking, a snapshot of how we love, how we sustain, how we fail. Web of Care is not static, it is alive, moving with each participant, with each choice made and not made.