A Happy one more global New Year!
Milena Kosec was born in January 1947 in Ljubljana (Slovenia, EU), where she has lived and worked her entire life. In 1974 she graduated in technical mathematics at Ljubljana University. In 1971 she started her first job at the Jožef Stefan Institute. She planned and led the elaboration of new applications for different fields in different companies, usually by means of the most current computer technology. By the end of year 2002 she was retired. In the years between 1975 to 1983 she primarily devoted herself to her family.
Her artistic work began spontaneously with her first work “Državica Ptičjestrašilna” (The Pocket-size State of Scarecrows) in 1992. After that, she performed several public actions which commented on events in Slovenia intertwined with her own intimate stories. In 2007 she decided that she would no longer produce anything material-based nor document her work. In 2008 she was invited to the European Contemporary Art Biennial MANIFESTA7, with one of her immaterial projects Random Private Conversations.
After her last art action in 2012, Milena read a lot about the situation in her country and the world in general. Bewildered by the vast and contradictory information available and the number of the contemporary artists with similar practice, she became unsure if her critical approach to art was still relevant. This has made her stop her art practice and return to the question: “what are the basic needs for life?” Having “water and food” as her answer to this question, she decided to improve her knowledge on them through manual work and organic gardening. Her first attempt at gardening this past year made her realize that she needed more education about various aspects of organic gardening.
During her 2nd year at RFAOH, she will continue to educate herself on this front while she may report some other related on-hiatus activities throughout the year. She feels that this on-hiatus activity may be helpful for her art practice in the future.
To be an honorary resident was even more liberating than to be a normal resident. I enjoyed in gardening without thinking what would be important to write for residence page. I am grateful to Shinobu and Matt for opportunity in which I was connected with other residents one year more. To be without any obligation was wonderful feeling.
The last year of the residency I improved my knowledge about gardening through every day practice. It was important that I have enough time for working in garden and cooking fresh vegetable every day. As I had enough different vegetables I ate much healthier. The final consequence of all together is strong improvement of my health (much less problems with chronic diseases).
In two years of residency I completely broke with routine of making art. As I had enough time for looking around and thinking I saw or better I felt how quick society is changing. Contemporary art can't adequately follow this changes caused by technology on one hand and hegemonic states on another hand. We as society are not aware at all what is going on. In front of us I see total unknown world which is completely indescribable, which I hardly can even think about. How than can I make comments on it?
My plan for future is gardening and different other activities. As artist I will probably stay on hiatus.
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Instead of snow we have seeds of Japanese anemone (Anemone hupehensis) all around.
October 2014
After long rainy September we had twenty beautiful sunny and warm days of October. Temperature was about 20°C. But rains came again. We had extensive flood. At my house water came to the first stair and in the cellar with potatoes. Fortunately my vegetable garden lies a bit higher. So it wasn’t overflow. We had rain still in beginning of December. But we hadn’t temperature under zero at all. A big part of November temperature was about 10°C and then 5°C till the 10th December when we had first under zero temperature. Because favourable temperature I could eat fresh vegetable (broccoli, endive, carrot,..) from the garden. Now on the beds I still have very good sweet fennel, different kind of kales and radicchios. I haven’t any more leek (leek fly), celery (rust), spinach and red beet (a lot of different caterpillars and snails). With plastic box I covered parsley and tender radicchio (chicory) of Trieste to have them for early spring time. In beds I put winter salad, garlic and two different kinds of onions. I both also two fruit trees: apple and pear. So far all look very well. All beds I powdered with lime and covered with leaves. Unfortunately leaves give very good protection also to snails and other pests. But anyway the garden is prepared for winter time and I for internet in worm house. Momentary days are sunny but cold.
November 2014
For optimistic view on future I recommended one much more than beautiful film Le sel da la terre / Salt of the Earth by Wim Wenders and Juliano Ribeiro Salgado. The film is documentary portray of photographer Sebastian Salgada.
December 2014
Mary Kroetsch wrote on Jan 1:
I just wanted to say how much I enjoyed reading all of your progress reports on the Garden.
We moved to a little bungalow 3 years ago and decided to create a garden. We know nothing about gardening - that was my Mom's area of expertise. But our community encourages taking the yards back to as natural a habitat as possible which means selecting plants that are able to self contain and live and play nice with other plants.
It's a challenge. Every time I put the spade in the ground I hit a rock. Last summer I turned all those rocks into a rock garden.
I find sitting on the ground and yanking out the Creeping Charlie of which we have a bumper crop, very therapeutic.
shinobu wrote on Dec 31:
It's so pretty, Milena, we had to use it as our greeting on RFAOH FB page, photo courtesy of you!
matt wrote on Dec 31:
:)