I am studying gardens and the territories where war leaves its mark. I seek out people who have faced occupation authorities in their regions, individuals who know where people were tortured and killed. I collaborate with search groups that operate under state programs such as Black Tulip and On the Shield. These groups work in de-occupied territories to find the fallen and facilitate their transfer to the appropriate services, who can then conduct a proper burial ritual. The garden serves as an example of a medium of senses and comprehension. It fosters the opportunity of reflection and self-awareness as a thinking unit.
Robert Pogue Harrison, in Gardens: An Essay on the Human Condition, writes that the garden represents a condition of personal thinking that resonates with my vision and analysis of the study. The garden, as a cultural object, is the result of actions that may not be witnessed during our lives, yet we erect and protect it as a place of joint action and hope, understanding its influence on our will.
The hardest thing that is given to people to share is grief. A culture of dealing with loss, where tears are an invisible part, like roots hidden underground, in a place where the body is wrapped around it. Services that search for bodies in the garden of war represent culture that is usually neglected. Building memory through successive steps of growing and cultivating the garden is as necessary as the growth of maturity. Given the appropriate means, space, and time to concentrate on artistic studies, I have no doubt that we will accomplish remarkable things.