Clemens Nestroy
Martin Roth grew several species of grass on an assortment of valuable rugs for an installation initially staged in Austria. He is now showing this at the Korean Cultural Centre in London.
Clemens Nestroy
Drawing on the representations of gardens that are commonplace on such rugs, the artist created a garden within a castle.
courtesy Martin Roth
For this installation, Roth filled a gallery with debris from the war in Syria, and created a landscape in which rescued parakeets would live throughout the duration of the exhibition.
Most of the debris was brought to New York in suitcases. Roth explained, "I wanted people to walk through the exhibition and then walk home with the dust of the debris on their shoes -- to bring the war home essentially."
courtesy Martin Roth
The basement of the gallery was flooded and inhabited by rescued bullfrogs.
courtesy Martin Roth
Viewers were encouraged to interact and touch the plants in this installation, which affected the sound they produced.
courtesy Martin Roth
This bonsai was flanked by two speakers, which fed live sounds of crickets, frogs, lizards, birds and fish.
courtesy Martin Roth
For this work the artist purchased the loneliest bird in a pet shop and took him on a road trip to the Salton Sea, one of the most diverse bird wildlife refuges in the US.
courtesy Martin Roth
In 2012, Roth went to live in the European countryside among sheep. The artist's retreat functioned as a "rupture of our 24/7, always-on, always-connected, high performance culture."
courtesy Martin Roth
Roth sent a vegetable to the conceptual artist Bas Jan Ader, who went missing in 1975 while trying to cross the Atlantic. Many believe it was a disappearing act, and that the artist is still living on a small island.
courtesy Martin Roth
Freed from their involvement in science these mice would listen to Tchaikovsky's "Swan Lake" when using the exercise wheel, which was connected to a music box.
courtesy Martin Roth
Exploring the notion of the artist as a nurturer and caretaker, Roth transformed his studio into a habitat for six ducklings -- a take on the idea of an artist creating and nurturing their work. The result was not a finished object for display. The ducklings were simply released.
CNN  — 

The home and the garden become one in “untitled (Persian Rugs) 2016” Martin Roth’s latest installation at the Korean Cultural Centre in London, where he’s brought a number of ancient Persian carpets to life through the cultivation of grass.

It’s not the first time Roth has incorporated the natural world into his work. Previously, the Austrian-born, New York-based artist has has filled a New York gallery with Syrian rubble and parakeets; used a Donald Judd sculpture as a snail habitat; flooded an Austrian gallery; released a goldfish into the Chinese Garden Court at the Metropolitan Museum of Art; and, in July 2012, lived among sheep in the European countryside, saying “it functioned as a rupture of our 24/7, always-on, always-connected, high performance culture.”

Roth utilizes living organisms “as a stand in for humans – to show that we’re also characters caught in conditions where we don’t have control.”

He spoke to CNN Style about working with living organisms and changing our perceptions of reality.

02:36 - Source: CNN
'The Hive': Modern art controlled by bees

Why have you always used organic matter in your work?

My main interest is this idea that something is constantly changing. I started working with organic matter because it ensured the installation was different each time you saw it.

Where did the idea of using Persian carpets in an installation come from?

Carpets were originally reproductions of gardens, and I love the idea that rugs are basically gardens that can move across space.

The idea came out of having this object that is a representation of nature, and thinking ‘How can I make this real?’ By planting a lawn indoors, I am playing with the notion that nature has already been domesticated. A lawn has become a poor substitute for nature, but at the same time grass also stands for life – it’s a resilient survivor in an urban jungle.

courtesy Martin Roth
In 2012 artist Martin Roth went to live in the European countryside among sheep.

Was it difficult logistically?

It really was an experiment, I didn’t know if it would work. At first I wondered how I could place soil underneath or on top, but when we tried it out in the studio suddenly the grass grew without soil. This made it much more interesting for me, as suddenly it was an almost utopic gesture. I was creating this beautiful, lush, green garden on top of this dark red Persian carpet that ultimately could not survive. It would always be ephemeral; it would at one point just disappear.

Does the object itself – in this case the Persian carpet – have any significance?

It has this political and cultural meaning, as it’s a beautiful, handmade cultural icon. By creating something new from this piece, in a sense I’m destroying a cultural item.

Clemens Nestroy
Roth grew several species of grass on an assortment of valuable rugs. Drawing on the representations of gardens that are commonplace on such rugs, he created a literal garden within a castle.

Do you encounter any problems working with such unpredictable materials?

It’s part of the work. An artist is usually in control of his or her work – you’re the master over your painting, you step back, you add another brush stroke et cetera – but with my work, I just put things in motion. I put the seeds on the carpet, but where and how the grass grows is out of my control. This is really important – there’s this sense that it’s always changing, but also that it’s living on its own. As the artist, I’m almost secondary. I set it up and then the work creates itself.

Do you view your work as philosophical?

I would love to. I hope to. It’s not just what it is. I see a lot of work where a plant or an animal is used like a prop, and I know that’s not my work.

By giving agency to animals and plants, by viewing them as collaborators, I hope to raise philosophical questions in the viewer. I don’t believe in the existence of a single world in which all living creatures share the same time and space, and with my work, I hope to draw attention to the simultaneous familiarity and strangeness, and closeness and alienation, between us humans and the world at large.

Koo Jeong A: Riptide, Korean Cultural Centre UK, London, 7 October – 19 November 2016