Siena: Urban Agriculture, Marjetica Potrč, 2003

“Siena: urban agriculture

In the future, wars will be fought over water, not oil, and they will be fought within cities.

My proposal is to develop a hydroponic garden on the rooftop of a private site in the city of Siena. This project focuses on the concept of self-sufficiency and private space. It is a small-scale project that can make use of local, prefabricated, and recyclable materials.

Hydroponic gardens do not require soil. A rooftop garden can provide its owner with both vegetables and rainwater, which can also be collected from other rooftops—a method traditionally used in Mediterranean cities. The water, stored in tanks, can be used for non-potable purposes, thus offering the owner a dual water system.

Contesto: La Banca Mondiale raccomanda lo sviluppo dell’agricoltura urbana per le città in crescita come il Cairo. Questo sistema è già in attuazione a Caracas. Un mese fa, camminando per le strade di Siena e San Gimignano, ho avuto l’impressione che il peso della storia stia affondando queste città; con il progetto sull’agricoltura urbana, vorrei portare in primo piano i problemi, gli stili di vita e i bisogni della città contemporanea nel contesto di Siena.”

— Marjetica Potrč, Arte all’Arte VIII, 2003

Art Exhibitions

Talks

In occasione della VIII edizione di Art to Art, i curatori Elio Grazioli and Hou Hanru invitato l’artista slovena Marjetica Potrč a realizzare un installazione a Siena.

"The Slovenian artist Marjetica Potrč is deeply engaged in exploring living conditions and contemporary urban expansion, as well as the tension between urban development and social crisis, such as the rise in poverty and the ecological emergency—both reflections of the conflicts present in our globalized era. The artist visits several “difficult places” in the world, such as Africa and South America, to bear witness to this new urban condition. Recently, Marjetica Potrč has been working on the theme of urban agriculture, seen as a reassuring possibility in response to the growing disconnection between city dwellers and nature. Responding to the economic and geographical context of the Tuscan region, where Arte all’Arte takes place, Marjetica Potrč decided to contribute with a site-specific project focused on urban agriculture. She points out that “future wars will be fought over water, not oil, and they will take place in cities.” As an example of a future urban agriculture experiment, her proposal is to create an actual vegetable garden on the rooftop of a private home in Siena. The artist has installed systems for collecting and recycling rainwater, making it possible to supply the necessary water both for growing vegetables and for daily household use. All of this undoubtedly raises questions about the ecological future of the city. Even more remarkably, Potrč reintroduces experiments carried out in the cities of the “non-Western” world into the very heart of Western history, demonstrating the irreversible nature of today’s globalization process: it is not only human migration that is changing the Western world. Various forms of negotiating and reinventing modern technologies, and lifestyles tested outside the West, are now being brought into the light to improve the developed Western world—and Siena is one of these laboratories."

Arte all’Arte VIII, 2003

Credits

Marjetica Potrč
Siena: Urban Agriculture, 2003
Fontebranda, Siena
Project for Arte all’Arte 2003
Photo by Ela Bialkowska