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Mineral Lick

Mineral Lick

Mineral Lick

entry n°
H-900
type
artwork
themes
materials
sculpture
space
date
29 February 2024
February 2024
2024
 – 
6 April 2024
April 2024
2024
location
London, UK
by
Saskia Noor van Imhoff
with
GRIMM gallery

Van Imhoff explores the remnants and traces of the past in her sculptural work, seeking to understand the emotional residue of lives lived among forgotten and discarded sites. The farmstead left the land in disrepair, the soil was degraded and areas become a dumping ground for rubble and building materials in recent decades, which Van Imhoff has begun to sift through and cultivate to create a fertile new environment, beginning a new cycle of growth and regeneration. During this process, she has discovered vestiges of former use, which she has researched and documented throughout, incorporated into her work in the form of maps, objects and etchings that reference the former use of the plot of land.

Mineral Lick examines the meaning of (agri)cultural heritage and the role of the artist as a steward and custodian of the environment today through new work incorporating the imprint of the past use of land. For example in Grids, Nettles and Thistles (Nitrogen Traces), Van Imhoff reconstitutes rubber mats, previously used for herding cattle as the base for a series of etchings that document the plant life that was propagated to enrich the nitrogen content of grazing fields. These plants speak to the history and condition of the land, and to recent political imperatives that seek to reduce the Netherlands’ carbon dioxide emissions by downsizing its livestock.

Bringing an awareness to the knowledge held within materials themselves, Van Imhoff works with found objects on the former farmstead, including wooden beams or the sprawling roots of trees growing around the building. She employs a process of ‘grafting’ - a botanical technique to propagate and renew a cutting from a plant - as she casts part of an object in bronze and aluminium and creates a hybrid sculptural work that both preserves and monumentalises the material and its history. The rubber mats and wooden beams extracted from the site are testament to their origin, evolution, and current state simultaneously, referencing their former use, resistance to change, and the shifting meaning of the farm today.

As Vincent van Velsen, curator at the Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam (NL) comments on her work; “objects contain ghost images: imprints that linger within the material structure of an object that are not necessarily derivable by the human eye, as they might also have repercussions beyond surface.” Van Imhoff’s process of grafting together objects becomes a metaphor for the progress of the land itself; by rethinking, recontextualising and reclaiming a site, new relationships are born, and new concepts of nature develop. Each artwork creates an opportunity to rethink the land and its use, value, and legacy.