short biographies

Hartmut Stockter works with the representation of and our relation to nature. He is a daytripper engaged with science and inventions and how they can be applied for everyday uses.
www.hstockter.de

Marie Markman  is a visual artist currently studying at the Agricultural University of Copenhagen to gain knowledge of nature in the city. She makes both large scale and subtle alterations to those city spaces we normally take for granted.
www.femenslandskaber.info

Åsa Sonjasdotter works with local participation and international issues seen through something as seemingly mundane as potatos.
www.potatoperspective.org

Camilla Berner deals with peoples encounter with nature in the city. By registration of self-made paths through citiy parks and the occurrence of weed vegetation as a possible urban garden. She points at encounters with nature reserved a private space.
www.kunstdk.dk
www.isholf.is/guk/2005/cb/cb-intro.htm

Gillion Grantsaan makes art from the waste of the city and our culture. He often deals with issues of inclusion and exclusion with both humour and cutting satire.
www.minority-report.dk

Nance Klehm is one of Chicago's leading practitioners of ad-hoc urban growing and foraging. She is also a writer and lecturer, and has a comprehensive knowledge about historical and practical uses of plants in medicine and cooking.
www.salvationjane.net

Jonas Maria Schul is a visual artist and landscape architect working with the history and signification of plantlife and the way we cultivate the landscape.
www.schul.dk

Outer Nørrebro Culture Bureau (YNBK) is an artist group located in outer Nørrebro. For a number of years they have been working to transform the Freightmanhalls into an arts and culturecenter and to make an activity park on the former railtracks just behind it.
www.ynkb.dk

Nis Rømer has a special interest in how processes of globalization affects the city and our natural environment. He works in the international artist group Free Soil and has through a number of years been dealing with art in public spaces.
www.free-soil.org