Fertile ground is the critical platform for the practice of freelance curator Rachel Grant, based in Aberdeen in the North East of Scotland.
A handful of soil is a small and complex ecosystem all of which interact, support and generate fertile ground. The distance between its literal and figurative meaning is small, fertile ground can be arable land; it is also defined as a situation that produces ideas. This latter meaning is where Fertile Ground situates itself; committed to the labour and care involved in cultivating new perspectives on culture. Working with people across backgrounds and disciplines Fertile Ground responds to the social, political and environmental ways of inhabiting the city.
A handful of soil is a small and complex ecosystem all of which interact, support and generate fertile ground. The distance between its literal and figurative meaning is small, fertile ground can be arable land; it is also defined as a situation that produces ideas. This latter meaning is where Fertile Ground situates itself; committed to the labour and care involved in cultivating new perspectives on culture. Working with people across backgrounds and disciplines Fertile Ground responds to the social, political and environmental ways of inhabiting the city.
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ABOUT
Rachel Grant is a curator living and working in Aberdeen in the North East of Scotland |