BCASFD is based on an investigation on the biggest biologically caused loss of forest in Germany. Together with specialists, I construct the case of the spruce tree and its six-legged enemy, which lead us away from the forest and back to humanity.
Breaking News: Spruce
Germany witnesses the greatest biological loss of forests in history. Visiting my grandparents close to Cologne, I was observing and capturing the forest catastrophe from a young age on. Over the years, the green landscape turned light brown. And today, it turned into kilometre-long spruce log piles. It is said to be caused by the overpopulated bark beetle.
However, climate change, planting of spruce monocultures, war reparations, political decisions and eventually human neglect and ignorance have all played a major part. The forest was transformed into a factory with the tree being the product - a product prone to diseases and natural events, such as the bark beetle infestation. To give an idea of the scale, the commercialised spruce tree is by far the most used and thus the most important wood in Europe.
Mission
As an artist, I have the urge and feel responsible to uncover and educate about the causes of the loss of these forests. In my installation, I approach the case of the spruce tree from different perspectives and unfold the complexity of its history to raise awareness about human destruction of ecosystems. The spruce forest extinction is only one of many examples that illustrates the gap between ethics and human intervention in shared environments.