Thoughts about Lichens
Today, I’m reading about lichens. How they cover as much as 8% of the earth’s surface (more than is covered by tropical rain-forests), how they are ancient composite organisms made up of fungi, algae and cyanobacteria, how they can exist in the extremest conditions. Merlin Sheldrake calls them “small worlds” in his book Entagled Life - How fungi make our worlds, change our minds, and shape our futures. “Lichens are places where an organism unravels into an ecosystem and where an ecosystem congeals into an organism.”
I’m very interested in this miracle of symbiosis and collaboration, not to metion the aesthetic versatility they display. On my recent travels to South Africa, I encountered them everywhere - pink lichen growing directly on the red hard earth in the Cederberg mountain range, bright yellowish-green ones on coastal rocks, exposed to sun and Atlantic sea-spray and salt. What happens when mosses and lichen are neighbours?
I’m thinking about how to build an impression of organisms-growing-on-other-organisms in my work, how I can play with these soft-hard surfaces, how I can use these textures, colours to create a sense of encrustation, composite beings, colonies (as you can see in my recent experiments below).