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Andrés Jaque

The TRANSSPECIES KITCHEN, an ANTWERPHAGIA

Andrés Jaque / Office for Political Innovation . photos: © José Hevia

Cooking, digesting, growing, and decomposing are all the same: an alliance between different forms of life. The Transspecies Kitchen is a project by Andrés Jaque / Office for Political Innovation, now installed an active at the Middleheim Museum in Antwerp (Belgium). It is the result of a long process that started in 2021, as an association between the NY and Madrid based office OFFPOLINN and the stone fabrication company M-Marble Project. It is a kitchen that decarbonizes cooking, and relies on fermentation as the primary form of food preparation.

This kitchen is part of a long running dedication of the Office for Political Innovation to interrogate the architecture of eating processes from an ecopolitical perspective (including the 2003 ‘Techno-Human’ project, the 2007 ‘1 Liter Oil Banquet’, and the 2019 hybrid space ‘RunRunRun’ in Madrid).

The ‘Transspecies Kitchen’
Kitchening is less physical than ecological and political. Kitchening is the realm of collective living. It is evidence for the impossibility of individual life. As such, the ultimate form of kitchening is zymology (bacteria and fungi-based fermentation). The Transspecies Kitchen is an outing of digestion, as an infrastructure where the politics of life-making are intervened by post-carbon cooking.
The Transspecies Kitchen is produced out of pieces of marble thrown off as waste by the stone extraction industry. Only 30% of stones extracted in quarries is industrially used; the rest is immediately converted to waste. The Transspecies Kitchen challenges industry’s waste making, by recirculating and activating the material value to what was previously disposed of. Stones are barely transformed to become part of the Transspecies Kitchen. No other materials that the stone itself is added. An architectural strategy founded on rawness, that alignes with the kitchening strategy, and invites bodies, communities, and territories alike to step back from industrialization and waste-making.

This post-carbon kitchen operates as a collective intestine that shows that metabolism is not an independent process. Instead, metabolism is a collectively constituted process dependent on more-than- human alliances. The Transspecies Kitchen dilutes the boundaries between kitchening, eating, and decomposing, which comprise a continuum of molecular progression.

Starting in July 2024, and during the entire Summer, the Transspecies Kitchen is installed and active in the forest of the Middelheim Museum in Antwerp. The kitchen is used as the site for Antwerphagia, the act of eating and being eaten by/as Antwerp’s ecosystems. At the moment when toxicity in the soil, and climate- crisis shape Flanders’ politics, the Antwerphagia is intended to provide alternative transspecies alliances based on mutual care. These alliances are humanly sensed as taste, smell, intoxication, euphoria, sleepiness, drowsiness, dyspepsia, being high, flatulence, diarrhea, heartburn, acidity, intolerance. Our kitchen is not fuelled by gas, nor by electricity. Transspecies kitchening is the art of counting energy out of molecular sociability.
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by Andrés Jaque / Office for Political Innovation in association with M-Marble Project
Developed with the support of the Tallin Architecture Biennale 2022 ‘Edible; Or, The Architecture of Metabolism’, curated by Lydia Kallipoliti and Areti Markopoulou.
Team
Andrés Jaque, Roberto González García, José María Miñarro, José Víctor Boluda, Gema Marín, Ismael Medina, Jesús Meseguer.
The Transspecies Kitchen, an Antwerphagia.
In collaboration with Natalie Schrauwen (Elder-Lab), as part of COME CLOSER program (Summer 2024), Middelheim Museum and DE SINGEL, Antwerp (Belgium)
Team
Pieter Boons (curator), Anna Stoppa (assistant curator), Eve van Goey (exhibition assistant), Christian Huyghe (production coordinator).