Founded in 2011, WTN has grown to a network of 20 action-research groups, currently exploring sites within Europe, Eastern Europe and South East Asia. Through accessing local archives in combination with oral histories the project has often placed the global-local paradigm in relationship to personal narratives of usage. These narratives are then transformed into rituals, ceremonies, interventions, happenings and events, staged concurrently in twinned sites. Projects in the network are aimed at arts/architectural/social-science and citizen groups as well as vulnerable groups that engage with the wasteland situation on a daily basis. In most projects, groups travel to their twinned sites, creating comparative tactics for the protection of open, ‘common’ space in cities, in relation to private interests. Local site-activism in Amsterdam is thrown into dialogue with a campaign for citizen rights in Yogyakarta, and other local-global relationships.
WTN puts forth an international discourse, challenging itself to truly act globally, while maintaining a direct meaning for participants’ daily lives. The network marks an immediate relationship between research and use, changing perceptions while creating strong local capital within the wasteland precarity.
Wasteland Twinning Network aspires towards a permanent policy advisory role within the United Nations, concerning the benefits of the global wasteland phenomena.
About the artist
WTN is co-directed by artist, urbanist and curator Matthias Einhoff, artist and curator Will Foster, artist and programmer Lars Hayer and artist and radio producer Alex Head. The project’s interdisciplinary breadth includes practitioners from the fields of sociology, ecology, political theory, art and education. The WTN Forum 2012 hosted performances and cross-disciplinary knowledge production in a manner amplified by two two-year projects: Recreation Ground (2012-2014) and Homey Island (2014-2016).