Hortirecycling Enterprise, act II - Unité de transformation

Studio Orta - 6012
Studio Orta - 0612
Studio Orta - 0612.jpg
Studio Orta - 0612
Studio Orta - 0612

Date: 1999
Ref: 0612
Matériaux: Chariot métallique, évier, ustensiles de cuisine, pots à confiture, seaux, photographies, adhésifs
Dimensions: 95 x 65 x 200cm
Catalogued: 2014 Lucy + Jorge Orta: Food Water Life. Actes Sud, Arles, p 31; 2012 Lucy + Jorge Orta: Food Water Life, Princeton Architectural Press, NY, p.57; 2003 Lucy Orta, Phaidon Press UK, pp 66-68
Exhibition history: 2009 Plymouth Arts Centre, UK; 2005 Barbican Art Gallery London, UK; 1999 Weiner Secession, Austria
Courtesy: The Artists

Following on from the All in One Basket project initiated in 1997, HortiRecycling Enterprise act II took place in Vienna, drawing from the founding motto of the Wiener Secession “To every age its art and to art its freedom” and the proximity of the fruit and vegetable Naschmarkt opposite the gallery. Instead of discarding their overripe fruit and vegetables on the floor, the market vendors were given Collect Units brightly colored, silkscreen-printed bags, to fill with rejected produce throughout the day. The artists collected the bags of fruit and vegetables using the Processing Units mobile kitchens with integrated shopping carts, sinks, hotplates, and freezers. The ripe produce was cleaned, chopped, and cooked by the Viennese chef Han Staud on location in the market. They distributed the fresh delicacies to encourage the public to take up these kinds of sustainable initiatives.
In the Wiener Secession’s first-floor gallery, a fully-functioning kitchen complete with a Collect Unit Pulley, a wooden winch reminiscent of the medieval pulley systems used to haul groceries in baskets to the upper floors of tall buildings. Using this device, market produce was delivered to the gallery, cleaned, cooked, and then bottled or frozen in dainty portions ready for distribution. This pilot action took place in both the market and the gallery, illustrating the multiple possibilities of a recycling enterprise and at the same time bringing together an art institution, the street, and the different communities involved.