An Ecosystem of Excess

Pinar Yoldas

With An Ecosystem of Excess, Turkish artist Pinar Yoldas creates a post-human ecosystem made up of speculative organisms and their imaginary environment. The "Great Pacific Garbage Patch", a vortex of rubbish made up of several million tonnes of plastic waste in the North Pacific and equivalent in size to central Europe, is the terrain the artist is examining and the birthplace of species in excess.

According to the "primordial soup" theory, life on earth appeared four billion years ago in the oceans, when inorganic matter was transformed into organic molecules. Today, the oceans have become a soup of plastic. Pinar Yoldas sees the oceans as a place for the exchange of organic and synthetic matter, a fusion of nature and culture, and wonders what forms of life might emerge from the primordial mud of today's oceans.

▶ Artwork: An Ecosystem of Excess (2013-2023), 2023, 3 vases with 3D printed organisms, variable dimensions

▶ Venue: Association pour la Sauvegarde du Léman

  • An Ecosystem of Excess

    Pinar Yoldas, An Ecosystem of Excess, 2023. – Ereza Haliti

An Ecosystem of Excess
Space of the Association for the Preservation of Lake Geneva, An Ecosystem of Excess on the right, 2023. – Julien Gremaud
An Ecosystem of Excess
Visitors during a guided tour at the Association pour la Sauvegarde du Léman looking at the work of Pinar Yoldas, 2023. – Laura Moreva
An Ecosystem of Excess
Visitors during a guided tour at the Association pour la Sauvegarde du Léman looking at the work of Pinar Yoldas, 2023. – Laura Moreva
An Ecosystem of Excess
Pinar Yoldas, An Ecosystem of Excess, 2023. – Julien Gremaud