Composting Colonialism: Towards the Radical Garden

Saturday 26 July – Saturday 4 October 2025
Bulbophyllum refractum, Black and white lantern slide. ca. 1900, courtesy of the National Botanic Gardens, Glasnevin / OPW REF:NBG/PHO/ORC/1/4 | Composting Colonialism: Towards the Radical Garden | Saturday 26 July – Saturday 4 October 2025 | Mermaid Arts Centre | Image: Bulbophyllum refractum, Black and white lantern slide. ca. 1900, courtesy of the National Botanic Gardens, Glasnevin / OPW REF:NBG/PHO/ORC/1/4 | black-and-white photo of what may be an orchide in a clay pot; the plantseems barely to hav leaves and, with the pot on the left, it tilts at at 45-degree angle towards the right, with what seem to be heavy buds weighing down the stem; the pot has large round holes in its side through which we can apparently see soil; the background seems to be some sort of hessian
Saturday 25 July: Curators’ tour 12 – 1pm • Exhibition opening 2 – 4pm

Samantha Brown (UK), Padraig Cunningham (IRL), Grace Enemaku (IRL), Yvanna Greene (IRL), Louis Haugh (IRL), Marianne Keating (IRL), Elida Maiques (ES), Siobhan McGibbon (IRL), Laura Ní Fhlabhín (IRL) and Harold Offeh (UK) • Curated by Elida Maiques and Anne Mullee

What does it mean to decolonise the garden? Selected works by Irish, Spanish and British artists consider the effects and legacy of colonialism, horticulture and the garden as a status symbol, inviting the audience to explore radical post-colonial horticultural practice and histories.

Imbued with notions of displacement, class, exile, invasion, appropriation, theft and hunger, the history of gardening and horticulture on the island of Ireland and beyond contains the very recipe of colonisation, from the plantations of both people and forests to the introduction of monoculture food and cash crops.

Through this lens we spy glimpses of horticulture as a colonised/decolonised space, from the proposed rehabilitation of an invasive plant species in Siobhán McGibbon’s installation Making Odd: A Goat, A Bee, A Psyllid, Fungus Knotweed and Me, (2023) to the hubris of the ultimate 18th Century status symbol – the garden with its own grotto-dwelling living hermit – as reimagined by Harold Offeh in this reiteration of his 2012 work Arcadia Reimagined.

An accompanying programme of public engagement events draws on Elida Maique’s expanded community-based practice as founder of The Mermaid Garden Project (2021-present), role as Bray Library Seed Librarian and as facilitator of guerrilla gardening project Edible Bray.

An accompanying publication, A Garden Sampler, contains texts, gardening notes, lore, radical histories and observations drawn from Ireland’s complex relationship to gardening and horticulture.

Image: Bulbophyllum refractum, Black and white lantern slide. ca. 1900, courtesy of the National Botanic Gardens, Glasnevin / OPW REF:NBG/PHO/ORC/1/4
Saturday 26 July – Saturday 4 October 2025
Mermaid Arts Centre
Main Street, Bray
Co. Wicklow
Telephone: +353 1 2724030
info@mermaidartscentre.ie
www.mermaidartscentre.ie
Opening hours / start times:
Monday – Saturday, 11am – 5pm
Admission / price: Free

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