OLDENBURG.- The Haus for Media Art Oldenburg presents Counter-Expeditions, a major solo exhibition by Colombian American artist, researcher, and filmmaker Felipe Castelblanco. The exhibition premieres several new works and offers a ten-year retrospective of the artists cross-disciplinary practice. It brings together a constellation of films, video installations, and photographs created in collaboration with communities across multiple geographiesfrom the Andean-Amazon foothills to the North Atlantic.
Rooted in a conceptually rich practice of situated research and artistic intervention, Counter-Expeditions proposes a radical rethinking of the colonial and epistemic legacy of the expedition. While the traditional expedition is framed as an act of conquest, discovery, or extraction, Castelblancos counter-expeditions offer an embodied, reciprocal form of movementone that prioritizes encounter, care, and dialogue with people and places. These works invite us to cross boundariesphysical, mental, and politicalthat divide knowledge systems and worldviews.
In Counter-Expeditions the movement of the travelers across terrains forms a continuum that puts one place in dialogue with the next. Therefore, counter-explorers do not aim to take possession of the memory, the place or the novelty of the encounter. Nor do they seek to claim parts of the landscape to justify the journey. Instead, counter-explorers bring new energy into the eco-social fabric they encounter through acts of offering, reciprocity, celebration, contemplation, and cooperation with those living and caring for the places that welcome them in. Unlike the flaneur, the counter-expeditioner is exposed and their own body endures, filters, absorbs and even carries each site within as a collection of experiences, minglings, unlearnings, and odd encounters with biocultural landscapes in constant flux.
At the heart of the exhibition is the new multichannel video installation Tunda: A Quantic Plant and the Devils Breath (2025). Other works on display include Ayênan: Water Territories (2022), Rio Arriba / Upriver (2020), and Driftless (2019), projects in which Castelblanco offers a methodology of traveling otherwise, blurring the lines between participatory art, fieldwork, film, and activism. These works foreground the body as a sensitive instrument for knowing, unlearning, and co-creating narratives in territories marked by rupture and ecological transformation.
Tunda: A Quantic Plant and the Devils Breath was realized in the framework of the research project Plants_Intelligence. (https://plants-intelligence.ch) Learning like a Plant (2022-25). A research project by Yvonne Volkart, Felipe Castelblanco, Julia Mensch and Rasa Smite, funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation and hosted by the Institute Art Gender Nature, Basel Academy of Art and Design FHNW. In 2024, Castelblanco received the Media Art Grant at the Haus for Media Art Oldenburg, funded by Stiftung Niedersachsen.
Felipe Castelblanco is a Colombian American artist and filmmaker whose socially engaged practice operates at the intersection of cinema, performance, and territorial research. He is postdoctoral fellow at the Institute Art Gender Nature, HGK Basel FHNW. He holds an MFA from Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburg, and a PhD from the Kunstuniversität Linz and HGK Basel FHNW. His work has been exhibited internationally, and he is the founder of The Para-Site School as well as Media Collectives across Europe and Latin America.