A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Auto-sym-poiesis in Heini Aho’s Installations: Re-thinking the Agency of Natural Forces




AuthorsTurkmen, Murat M.

Publication year2024

JournalNordiques

Issue46

eISSN2777-8479

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.4000/12llg

Web address https://doi.org/10.4000/12llg

Self-archived copy’s web addresshttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/459159507


Abstract

This article focuses on Heini Aho’s two site-specific installations, A Poem by a Plumber (2021) and
Thirsty Giant (2017), which enable natural forces, such as wind, sun, and rain, to become co-
creators of the artworks. Both installations are situated in relatively remote places where
creative dialogues can emerge with natural forces and the given physical environment. The artist
intentionally created what can be called semi-stable constructions for both of the works to make
visible and sensible the agency of natural forces and to explore how the human and “more-than-
human” agencies are creatively entangled in reciprocal relations. Thus, each installation unfolds
in an open-ended and autopoietic (self-creative) way as they entangle with the environment in a
sympoietic (co-creative) manner. Instead of mutually opposing aspects, I understand the
autopoiesis and sympoiesis as two sides of the very same event. To highlight this understanding,
I employ the combined term “auto-sym-poiesis” to study Aho’s works in this article. I argue that
agencies in nature and art are not isolated from the environment or each other. Instead, they are
creatively entangled in an indeterminate, continuously unfolding process of relationality.


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Funding information in the publication
Funded by Jenni and Wihuri Foundation


Last updated on 2025-04-06 at 14:27