Autolysis
       
     
       
     
German Song.jpg
       
     
front of room.jpg
       
     
5-4-2022-Goethe-Kapplow_Tufts-Dirty Walk-38.jpeg
       
     
Temple and Time Shroud.jpg
       
     
Basin.jpg
       
     
Back of Room.jpg
       
     
not piano.jpg
       
     
5-4-2022-Goethe-Kapplow_Tufts-Dirty Walk-13.jpeg
       
     
Phrag shroud less light.jpg
       
     
Table detail.jpg
       
     
prag detail.jpg
       
     
Feather Detail.jpg
       
     
Crowd.jpg
       
     
Library w PPL.jpg
       
     
dirt in container.jpg
       
     
Library Close Up.jpg
       
     
CT Dirt.jpg
       
     
DuckDirt.jpg
       
     
5-4-2022-Goethe-Kapplow_Tufts-Dirty Walk-41.jpeg
       
     
Father.jpg
       
     
Stretching.jpg
       
     
Emoji Detail.jpg
       
     
Not Piano Vertical.jpg
       
     
emoji legend.jpg
       
     
timeshroud.jpg
       
     
SoilBasin.jpg
       
     
5-4-2022-Goethe-Kapplow_Tufts-Dirty Walk-19.jpeg
       
     
Phrag Shroud.jpg
       
     
5-4-2022-Goethe-Kapplow_Tufts-Dirty Walk-20.jpeg
       
     
       
     
Autolysis
       
     
Autolysis

Autolysis (literally self-splitting—this is the name for the first stage of decomposition when a body is buried…) is a site-specific exploration of issues around climate change, plant species adaptation/extinction, and personal mortality through a focus on dirt.

Produced collaboratively with Walker Tufts, in June of 2022 for Goethe-Institut Boston’s Studio 170 residency program.

In response the Goethe-Institut’s building and the landscape (historical, socio-cultural and ecological) that surrounds it, Autolysis uses installed elements and participatory experiences to open up conversations about personal relationships with the earth and time in a way that emphasizes the actual material of the earth rather than earth with a capital “E”, creating spaces for gentle contemplation of end of life and end of species issues.

Autolysis is part of an ongoing series of projects that utilize queer sensibilities to investigate dirtyness called Dirty Time.

Photo credits: Heather Kapplow, James Manning, OJ Slaughter.

       
     
German Song.jpg
       
     
front of room.jpg
       
     
5-4-2022-Goethe-Kapplow_Tufts-Dirty Walk-38.jpeg
       
     
Temple and Time Shroud.jpg
       
     
Basin.jpg
       
     
Back of Room.jpg
       
     
not piano.jpg
       
     
5-4-2022-Goethe-Kapplow_Tufts-Dirty Walk-13.jpeg
       
     
Phrag shroud less light.jpg
       
     
Table detail.jpg
       
     
prag detail.jpg
       
     
Feather Detail.jpg
       
     
Crowd.jpg
       
     
Library w PPL.jpg
       
     
dirt in container.jpg
       
     
Library Close Up.jpg
       
     
CT Dirt.jpg
       
     
DuckDirt.jpg
       
     
5-4-2022-Goethe-Kapplow_Tufts-Dirty Walk-41.jpeg
       
     
Father.jpg
       
     
Stretching.jpg
       
     
Emoji Detail.jpg
       
     
Not Piano Vertical.jpg
       
     
emoji legend.jpg
       
     
timeshroud.jpg
       
     
SoilBasin.jpg
       
     
5-4-2022-Goethe-Kapplow_Tufts-Dirty Walk-19.jpeg
       
     
Phrag Shroud.jpg
       
     
5-4-2022-Goethe-Kapplow_Tufts-Dirty Walk-20.jpeg
       
     
       
     
Studio 170: Autolysis by Heather Kapplow and Walker Tufts