Date:
2025.02.08. 16.00-19.00
Artists:
You are warmly invited to the closing guided tour of Anna Zilahi’s Urtica exhibition, led by poet and visual artist Anna Zilahi and curator and gallery director Veronika Molnár, on February 8th (Saturday) at 4:00 PM. The exhibition will remain open for viewing until 7:00 PM on Saturday.
About the exhibition:
Anna Zilahi’s solo exhibition at Liget Gallery centers on the stinging nettle (urtica), a plant that encapsulates humanity’s ambiguous relationship with nature: it is both a troublesome weed and a potent medicinal herb. Since the emergence of private property, humans have sought to dominate their natural surroundings; with the advent of agriculture, they have exploited and commercialized them. Yet, our survival remains fundamentally tied to the natural world. The Enlightenment ideals that established rigid dichotomies—such as nature versus culture and body versus mind—now appear increasingly inadequate.
To challenge these binaries, Zilahi draws on Jacques Derrida’s concept of the pharmakon, a term that signifies both remedy and poison. The nettle embodies this duality: its sting causes pain, yet its properties can heal. This paradox mirrors the complexities of our relationship with nature itself. In her work, Zilahi approaches the nettle as a non-human entity with mythical, material, and active dimensions. Her ritualistic, almost collaborative engagement with the plant opens up new possibilities for connection and understanding. The exhibition includes new objects, photographs, and the video work Urtica (2022), which collectively examine the shifting dynamics and oscillation of the human-nature relationship and the concept of the pharmakon through an ecofeminist lens. […]
Opening hours: Wed-Thurs-Fri: 4-7 PM.
More info about the exhibition: https://ligetgallery.art/exhibition_item/anna-zilahi-urtica/
The exhibition was created with the professional support financed by the National Research, Development, and Innovation Fund under the University Research Fellowship Program of the Ministry of Culture and Innovation, code number 2024-2.1.1-EKÖP-2024-00020.
Photo by Barnabás Neogrády-Kiss.