Inheritance

"Nobody remembers why it was radioactive in the first place."

As the world turns again towards nuclear power, producing readily available energy but also waste toxic for millions of years, urgent questions once again emerge: What do we leave behind, what will the future inherit from us? How can we as individuals and society deal with the scales and scopes of deep time? How can we make sense of the vast time-scales involved?

Inheritance consists of precious jewelry, a necklace, earing and a broché, which are radioactive and therefore, rendered practically and symbolically unwearable for deep time, until the radionuclide transmutes naturally into a stable and non-radioactive isotope of lead. Together with an electromechanical device to determine the remaining radioactivity the jewelry is stored in a concrete container which is built to endure over a vast amount of time. With these items the story goes that each time the jewelry is handed over from one generation to the next, the ritual of measurement determines if the jewelry can finally be brought in use and fulfill its promise of wealth and identity or if it has to be stored away until the next generation.

Additional Info

  • Author(s): Erich Berger & Mari Keto
  • Year(s): 2016
  • Bio:

    Erich Berger (AT) is an artist, curator and cultural worker based in Helsinki. His interests lie in information processes and feedback structures, which he investigates through installations, situations, performances and interfaces. Throughout his artistic practice, he has explored the materiality of information and information and technology as artistic material. His current interest in issues of deep time and hybrid ecology led him to work with geological processes, radiogenic phenomena and their socio-political implications in the here and now. Berger also directs the Bioartsociety, an organisation based in Helsinki fostering interactions between art and natural sciences with a focus on biology, ecology and life sciences.

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    Mari Keto (FI) explores the limits of artifacts by combining jewelry materials in her installations and portraits. In Keto’s works both the conceptual underpinning and a high degree of craftsmanship merge into an artwork. Keto's work is strongly research-based. She engages with her subject matter from various perspectives in order to define her own. Keto explores the tensions and structures of our contemporary culture by portraying icons and symbols predominantly surrounding us. Deriving from cultural histories and pop culture her work examines the distinctions between value and consumption. Keto’s multi-layered works contain intemperate realism mixed with humor and irony.