january 10, 2012
Eat Love Budapest

Eat Love Budapest

Text by Designboom:

 

'Eat love budapest' by marije vogelzang is a multisensory performance project and experience, bringing together two strangers  for the intimate act of sharing food and being fed. the project emphasizes the individuality and beauty inherent in the life of each person, including the nameless ones we may pass each day on the subway or sidewalk, and those whom we may group together  as being all alike based on their nationality or appearance, as romani people have historically frequently suffered in various countries.

during the 3-day performance, each of ten roma women was invited to anonymously share her story with one stranger at a time, feeding her guest with her own hands foods that have personal meaning to her, and recounting memories, songs, and stories as they sit together. each woman also chose a scent with special significance-- either related to the foods she chose or something else-- and wore only this along her wrists as perfume. in the space, a musician quietly played traditional songs on guitar.

 

upon entering the space, a visitor is led by an assistant to a small tent-like installation and invited to sit inside. the tent itself recalls a child's playplace, with a lightbulb and walls composed of thin fabric, onto which drawings, recipes, photos, and texts written by the roma women have been pinned. the visitor sits upon a simple chair, made comfortable with pillows, from which position he cannot see outside, other than a dish of food raised on a platform on the floor just beyond his feet, and the legs and hands of a roma women seated.

 

once they are both sitting comfortably, the roma woman-- dressed completely in white-- begins washing her hands, in view of the visitor, and begins talking about her life. each woman speaks freely about her own personal memories and experiences. as she speaks, she feeds the visitor foods that have personal significance to her: first she breaks bread with him; next cracks nuts or peels fruits and feeds her visitor the slices. as the meal continues, she offers a few bites of different dishes of warm food fed by hand with a spoon-- as a mother might feed her child-- and then cheese, cake, and hot coffee. the preparation and serving of food becomes in itself a performance: the guest watches the woman's hands sprinkle cheese or herbs over her dishes, as she recounts the special meaning that this dish has for her.

 

when the meal has concluded, the roma woman leaves before the visitor is escorted out, ensuring that he never sees the face of the person with whom he has shared such an intimate experience. upon leaving the installation, each visitor receives a balloon that has been perfumed with the particular scent that the woman chose, and onto which is strung a tag with the woman's signature.

 

each visitor to the installation enjoys a different experience-- different stories, different foods, a different scent, and different photographs and messages in the tent. each also left having partaken not only of traditional foods but also the story of a person, in sound, taste, smell, and touch... likely to be relived at each scent of the balloon (s)he has taken home and each encounter of these foods, other roma people, or the smells and sounds experienced.

 

'eat love budapest' is among vogelzang's first major projects under her philosophy of 'eating design', elaborated upon in a recent book she published entitled 'eat love', and which integrates sensory experience, culture, and history:

 

'designers who work with the subject of food are often called 'food designers'. instead, [my] designs focus around the verb 'to eat'. it is often thought that designers who work with food only design the shape of it [but I] aim to look at the content and background of the food as well; the shape is just a tool to tell a story. you put my designs inside your body.' - marije vogelzang

 

 

Via: Designboom.com