PALERMO.- Manifesta 12 presents The Planetary Garden. Cultivating Coexistence, the concept explores coexistence in a world moved by invisible networks, transnational private interests, algorithmic intelligence and ever-increasing inequalities through the unique lens of Palermo a crossroads of three continents in the heart of the Mediterranean.
Closely collaborating with Palermitan partners, Manifesta 12 will co-inhabit Palermo as a laboratory to investigate the challenges of our time and look for traces of possible futures.
Throughout history, the City of Palermo has been a laboratory for diversity and cross- pollination, shaped by continuous migration. In the 1875 painting by Francesco Lojacono, View of Palermo (in the collection of the GAM Museum in Palermo), nothing was indigenous. Olive trees came from Asia, aspen from the Middle East and eucalyptus from Australia. Citrus trees the symbol of Sicily - were introduced under Arab sovereign.
The botanical garden of Palermo, Orto Botanico, was founded in 1789 as a laboratory to nurture, test, mix and gather diverse species. Inspired by Palermos Orto Botanico, Manifesta 12 will look at the idea of the garden, exploring its capacity to aggregate difference and to compose life out of movement and migration.
Gardens are places where diverse forms of life mix and adapt to co-exist. They allow for cross-pollination based on encounter. In 1997, French Botanist Gilles Clément described the world as a planetary garden with humanity in charge of being its gardener. Twenty years later, Manifesta 12 will revisit the metaphor of the garden, not as a space for humans to take control, but rather as a site where gardeners recognise their dependency on other species, and respond to climate, time, or an array of social factors, in a shared responsibility.
The Planetary Garden. Cultivating Coexistence will host 4 main sections, each touching on key topics of the concept: Garden of Flows, Out of Control Room, City on Stage and Teatro Garibaldi as the main center of Manifesta 12 (currently hosting a pre-biennial programme Aspettando Manifesta 12 Waiting for Maniefsta 12).
Palermo Atlas by OMA (Office for Metropolitan Architecture)
The Manifesta 12 concept was extracted from the city itself through a preliminary phase of investigation by OMA, Palermo Atlas. It was the first time that Manifesta had kicked- off the biennial with a research by an architecture office. The goal was to have a deeper understanding of social, cultural and geographical textures of the city; highlight its existing opportunities; and provide a source for audiences to understand contemporary transformations through the eyes of Palermo.