








The Studio kitchen team visited the Potager de la Reine - the queen’s garden, in Versailles
Click on image for more or go to Studio Kitchen Instagram for daily updates
The Studio kitchen team recently went to Versailles to visit the Potager de la Reine – the queen’s kitchen garden. The gardeners there employ partner planting, a system in which plants that complement each other in terms of the nutrients they release into the soil or the pests they discourage are placed in proximity. The natural synergies between the neighbouring plants help to diminish reliance on artificial fertilizers and pesticides, for which the gardeners substitute fertilisers and pest repellents made from weeds.
The herbs and vegetables produced by the garden are used at Alain Ducasse’s restaurants in Paris and Versailles. Mehdi Redjil, the garden’s chef de potager, works to reintroduce heirloom vegetables in conversation with the cooks at the restaurant – the cooks suggest a flavour and Mehdi researches and cultivates new (old) plants. Among the garden’s amazing variety of herbs are pineapple mint, banana mint, and pungent Vietnamese coriander.
Fog assembly, Versailles
23 April 2016, 7.35 p.m.
Dear Olafur,
Here is a first suggestion for launching the discussion (taking into account the sentence by Latour about James that you quoted).
William James’s ‘Pluralistic Universe’ is important to me in many different ways and for many different reasons, but, above all, because it defends the view that concepts distort rather than reveal reality. This can be pushed further, as the American philosopher Nelson Goodman did, by considering that reality in itself does not really exist. It is, at least, a kind of empty shell. However, ‘something’ is there, around us, acting on us. Dying and suffering are not social conventions. So, what are we doing when we try to create something? We are indeed probably making maps. Maps are never in a perfect one-to-one bijective correspondence with the actual landscape (the very idea of an actual landscape is not even obvious). One has to select a scale, a colour code, a set of meaningful types, etc. The map is, in itself, a creation made under the strong constraint of having to express something significant about the land it accounts for. I see myself, in my work as an astrophysicist, as a kind of cartographer. I do have a huge freedom in selecting what I consider to be important and in the way I try to build a correct theory, but I do have to face the constraints of observations and experiments. The ‘multiverse’ is not only in the different universes that were possibly created by the inflationary stage just after the Big Bang but also in our ways of world-making. And I see you somehow on the same axis: an inventor of worlds, who still needs and wants to account for what is beyond its own creation, a kind of excess and surpassed solipsism: we know that we cannot touch reality beyond ourselves, but still, if we do not try to change the axis, there is no point inventing anything. This is, in particular, something I feel about your artwork Your unpredictable path, created for this exhibition. Would you agree with this?
Aurélien Barrau
Leeum catalogue with text by philosopher Timothy Morton and correspondence between astrophysicist Aurélien Barrau and Olafur Eliasson
Won’t you listen to what the DJ’s spinnin’ . . . A DJ is a worker, and the work she or he does looks like someone on a production line. She takes a tune that comes down a conveyor belt – the belt is called time and the tune comes from a direction called future – and she matches it with a tune that is right in front of her, which is called nowness.
Timothy Morton, in the catalogue for The parliament of possibilities, Leeum Museum
The parliament of possibilities opens 28 September Leeum, Samsung Museum of Art, Seoul
Telepathy means ‘passion at a distance’.
What happens when we are in a space where a DJ is working is something like the formation of a gigantic ear. This ear attunes to the crowd, the crowd attunes to the attunement. It is not surprising that DJ-ing has often been described as telepathy. Telepathy means ‘passion at a distance’.
Timothy Morton
When I DJ I am listening to the tune. The things I hear in the tune get enhanced by other tunes that I juxtapose – I put them underneath, I overlap them, I make them fade into one another. I am saying, ‘There is more in this tune than the tune itself’. I expose the wiring under the board.
Timothy Morton
Your unpredictable sameness, Leeum, Samsung Museum of Art, Seoul #OlafurLeeum
Writing about music is always like dancing about architecture. Thinking about music is also like raining about glass. Philosophising about design. Designing about philosophy. Why not? It’s intuitive, no? I mean, dancing about architecture is exactly what we do every day, when we walk through it. As Viktor Shklovsky put it, a dance is simply a walk that is felt.
Timothy Morton
Rainbow assembly, studio test for #OlafurLeeum
Sharman - my guide in archery #morningpractice
Little Sun medals. Great to be at Eir soccer tournament
Eir is a soccer organization for women working for #genderequality
The 17 Global Goals for Sustainable Development #Globalgoals week
Find out more about them here
Chillies drying on the street in Seoul #OlafurLeeum
Studio Kitchen Instagram
CNNStyle visits Olafur in Copenhagen