Ceri Buck
Ceri Buck was born in England, then fled the country in the mid 90’s to France, then Brazil where she also learnt skills with groups committed to social experimentation and, how one might ‘sculpt oneself’ in permanent struggle with mechanisms of this era of control, micro-control and self-control. Upon returning to London in 2003 her work has considered how poetic experimentation and social experimentation can dip into each other’s box of tactical tricks to create new forms for language and living that can resist the disenfranchisement of the individual. What kind of skills, in relation to one’s environment, is one gaining in the act of experimenting in text? Is it possible for writing itself to be a form of activism? And how can we write collaboratively?
Also, check out this project INVISIBLE FOOD
Invisible food discovers the wild food growing quietly
in the Loughborough area, food that can nourish local residents
into health and resilience.
Invisible food responds to the global necessity to live more locally, to rely less on transport – now that the blip of cheap oil is over - and to create stronger networking communities.
Invisible food recognises that “the logic of the market leads to mass starvation”, as Mumia Abu-Jamal wrote about recent hikes in food prices leading to riots in Mexico. And we want to pass on the insight made by Vandana Shiva that we can only strengthen local economies in the developing world by relocalising agriculture in the West. Invisible food is fed up with the idea that developing countries have to export the food growing in their back yards for ‘growth’ and progress at the cost of their own nutrition and health. You can’t eat money. And besides, money is never fairly distributed, whereas plants are.
Invisible food responds to a sense of lack of earthly connections in inner city areas in London. It provides an opportunity to get on first name terms with local plants and to cook them up. Wild food is whole food. Wild food carries power and energy. Wild food is naturally occurring and uniquely adapted to its environment; resilience and strength are present in every cell of plant matter.
“Eat wild food frequently, in addition to your normal diet, your tastes begin to change. The junk foods you couldn’t resist before now irritate your tongue, smell offensive and generally annoy you … Wild food is vital, unique, local, common, simple, messy, fresh, abundant, accessible, seasonal, varied and full of love.” Susun Weed
Our wild food in London is a gift to us from its ancient woodlands.
Invisible food invites people from the local area to walk and talk and search out some urban food. It will then be used to make tea, infusions, cordials, soup, fritters, tarts, pies, salads, jams and beer.
In the noisy green silence of the hedgerows and bushes of Brixton, Invisible food will talk about what your mother told you about plants, what you can remember your grandmother doing with plants, what plants you remember from your childhood, wherever that was.
Invisible food is no expert. We are an experiment arising from the fractured and isolated urban condition of having very little to do plants. Invisible food is an excuse to learn.
Invisible food loves to acknowledge this suggestion by Meg Wheatly that, human conversation is the most ancient and easiest way to cultivate the conditions for change … if we can sit together and talk about what’s important to us, we begin to come alive. We share what we see, what we feel, and we listen to what others see and feel.
Invisible food sits and writes these looping sentences when not out walking the hedgerows and reflects on the conversations that were had out on the commons. Invisible food likes to show where ideas come from so that’s why there are lots of quotes.
Invisible food is a guerrilla operation liberating time through land, imagination through memory, and friendship through food.
Wild food quietly growing has a sister thread of a project called the Plant Olympics 2008 which is a workshop for children exploring and inventing games with plants.
If you want to go on a walk somewhere in the area stretching between Loughborough Junction, Loughborough, Mostyn and Ruskin Parks and Myatts Field, please call Ceri Buck on 07963 446605 or [email protected]
Priority is given to residents from the Loughborough Estate
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