I co-curated, mediated and produced the experimental exhibition project wild care, tame neglect: a unique long-term collaboration between the Frankendael Foundation and artist Edward Clydesdale Thomson, between 2016-2018.
Historical and contemporary notions of nature and culture, work and leisure collide at Frankendael. The house was built as a country house for the 17th-century bourgeoisie: as a sign of entrepreneurship, wealth and privileges and all that entails. After centuries of private ownership, Frankendael is now being used as a restaurant, venue for ceremonies, meetings, leisure and contemporary art.
Thomson embeds his current artistic practice in and around the manor, researching the paradoxes of nature that abound in this multi-functiional site of cultural heritage. Within the context of Huize Frankendael, he cultivates his daily working environment starting with a temporary studio in the garden from where he will realise artistic interventions, new artworks addressing the surroundings, a public program of workshops and lectures, an exhibition and a performance. Within this fluid programme there is the possibility for everything to bloom and decay with the seasons. Every aspect of Thomson’s activities can be followed closely within the public sphere of this historical venue that has been both lake, mansion and city nursery.
The core of wild care, tame neglect is the long-term relationship that Frankendael and Thomson cultivate. Rarely will or can a cultural institution and artist develop an intensive, two-year cooperation. This cooperation is an experimental model for artistic production. What are the mutual expectations and possibilities? What are the practical and substantive requirements, goals and aspirations in which an artwork can come about?
How is a work of art shaped by the conditions of its production? The cross-pollination between Frankendael and Thomson could be so different at the heights of summer or the depths of winter. With wild care, tame neglect, Frankendael offers an artist the unique opportunity to use this historic location both as a laboratory and exhibition space and Thomson offers the institution the possibility to explore the identity of its surroundings.