DIRT TO DIRT
2023
Undergraduate Thesis
Dining Room
10’ x 10’ x 14’
Wood, Dirt, Found Textiles
Patchwork Tablecloth
10’ x 10’ x 14’
Found Textiles, Hand and Machine Embroidery
Soil Samples & Tags
Soy Wax, Dirt, Unryu Paper, Thread
Soil Taxonomy Map
75” x 10’
Drypoint Intaglio on Paper, Thread
Dirt has an immeasurable impact on the human experience. Dirt to Dirt attempts to contextualize the cultural, colonial, and humanistic role that soil plays. Through domestic objects reminiscent of a traditional Western dining room, Dirt to Dirt draws the connections between European colonialism and its influence on our communal perception of dirt. From our everyday language to global politics, dirt as a social concept has been weaponized against both people and the environment. Defining land as nothing but dirt, defining people as dirty, defining dirt versus soil. Dirt has historically been used to justify colonial violence, to sully what is deemed pristine, and to degrade our most underappreciated and mistreated natural resource.