A social art project brought to the UK by the Latvian artists group Primitive and art bureau OPEN, who brought together a team of print-designers, photographers and video/new media artists to promote the symbolic values of the tea-mushroom through the use of controversial branding tools: a new, youth orientated brand-name: T-Shroom; eye-catching packaging; TV spots and print ads with anti-consumerism messages.
Collaboration between Primitive and Art Bureau OPEN (Latvia)
T-Shroom is a social art project brought to the UK by the Latvian artists group
Primitive and art bureau OPEN, who brought together a team of print-designers,
photographers and video / new media artists to promote the symbolic values of the
tea-mushroom through the use of controversial branding tools: a new, youth orientated
brand-name: T-Shroom; eye-catching packaging; TV spots and print ads with
anti-consumerism messages.
T-sroom 2002 will feature elements of the fake shop first installed during Christmas
2000 in a main shopping area of Riga: the video documentary work "Association of the
Tea Mushroom Growers" portraying families who still have the tea-mushroom in their
kitchens; interviewing their youngsters who now prefer Coca-Cola; as well as showing
real examples of this tiny biochemical factory and health promoting beverage.
Tea-mushroom or Kombocha - has been a popular home-made 'soft-drink' in the
Baltic states and Russia for more than a century and usually had a pet like
family-status. As it couldn't be bought in a shop, tea-mushroom became part of the
family heritage or even a long-living family member and effectively was distributed
through the human network.
Ten years after the breakdown of the Soviet Union, two Latvian new media artists
Peteris Kimelis and Katrina Neiburga smuggled a couple of tea-mushrooms over the
border to Stockholm and announced them as East European refugees, endangered in
their homeland by the invasion of global soft-drink brands like Coca-Cola. Tea-mushroom
has become an extinct minority in its field, symbolising the rapid
spread of the world's globalisation process, as well as the increasing impact of
chemical foodstuffs and industrial products in our everyday rituals.
Primitive was set up in 2000, by two artists Katrine Neiburga and Peteris Kimelis, as
a reaction to and critique of consumer culture and the alienation it brings to the social
realm. Previously they have worked with diverse forms of media art and their work has
been widely shown in Latvia, Finland, Sweden, Holland and Germany.
Art Bureau
OPEN [open.x-i.net] has been in existence since 1994 as a collective of artists, writers
and curators. In the last eight years OPEN has provided a platform for many critical
voices and realised numerous art intervention projects in public and media spaces. For
example: Untitled: subvertising session in streets of Riga
(http://open.x-i.net/subversija/) September 2001 - 500
billboards displayed the work of a local and international alliance of culture jammers and
communication guerrillas; Animal Farm, May 2001 - a project produced in
collaboration with the British Council; Slide show, 2000 - social commentary produced by 10
commissioned artists and screened on LNT television.
Kombucha is a combination of bacteria and yeasts living together symbiotically in a
matrix of mycelium-like threads. The active substances address themselves to
theentire body system. It can re-establish a normal condition in the cellular membranes
without any side effects and thus promotes one's well being in a natural, non-toxic
manner.
T-Shroom also will visit AVEDA institute in Holborn and Floating IP space in
Manchester later this year. Project is being presented in association with Visiting Arts
and AmbientTV.Net.
Fri-Sun 12-6pm or by appointment
Ibid
210 Cambridge Heath Road, Unit 4, London E2 9NQ
tel: 07951 562316