In the third edition of the event series “The Making Of,” artistic research fellow of the KHI at Villa Romana, Elia Nurvista, will present her practice, which centers on the discourse of food and is currently focused on the economy and politics of palm oil plantations. Her talk (11:00) will be followed by a workshop (14:00), in which participants approach batik not only as a textile practice but also as a way of thinking with surfaces. Wax, in its molten state, creates lines of resistance; blocking, staining, and shaping how color and memory settle into cloth. Each mark holds both intention and accident: cracks, smudges, and stains that become traces of time and gesture.
Participants are invited to experiment with the act of covering and revealing, thinking through how surfaces carry histories, how patterns emerge from repetition, and how memory lingers in material. Wax becomes a metaphor for the fragile boundaries we draw, between past and present, concealment and disclosure, permanence and impermanence. Through this collective process, the workshop proposes batik as a method of reflection: to trace, to resist, to remember, and to imagine.
11:00 –12:00 – Talk, Via Gustavo Modena 13, M020
14:00–16:40 – Workshop at Villa Romana, Via Senese 68, Florence
The workshop will take place in the garden at Villa Romana, a place of contemporary artistic production and international cultural exchange. Each participant is invited to prepare a simple one-color sketch (approximately 50 × 50 cm). The sketch can be inspired by themes such as invisible histories, fragile memories, or any subject of personal interest. This drawing will serve as a starting point for the batik-making process.
Please register for the workshop via
Y29kZWQgISBvYmplY3RzIHwga2hpICEgZmkgISBpdA==. Available spots will be distributed on a first come, first serve basis. To attend the talk, no registration is necessary, and attendance for the talk and workshop is independent.
The event series "The Making Of," organized by the Lise Meitner Group "Coded Objects" asks our guests to invite us behind the scenes of their process of making: of art works, of texts, of films, or of objects. How did they come into being? What were the constraints, limitations or adversities and, conversely, the opportunities and decisions that shaped both the process and the (potential) outcome? Rather than an artist’s talk or a scholarly lecture, this series seeks to discuss the processes of making first hand.
A second component of the series is the actual making of things. The dictum of the material, the humbling lack of skills, the discovery of form-finding: these are all modes of knowledge that reside in the shaping of matter. Learning from artisans, artists, engineers, cooks or seamstresses, we will try to feel our way into other forms of knowing.
Biographical Note
Elia Nurvista explores a wide range of artistic media with an interdisciplinary approach, centering her practice on the discourse of food. Through food, she examines structures of power, social and economic inequality, and the entanglement of daily life with global systems. Working across workshops, study groups, publications, site-specific projects, performances, video, and installation, she critically engages with the social implications of the food system to address broader issues such as ecology, gender, class, and geopolitics. Her current research expands toward the economy and politics of palm oil plantations, tracing their historical, ecological, and social complexities.
She attended the one-year studio program at Künstlerhaus Bethanien, Berlin (2018–2019) and the post-academie program at Jan Van Eyck Academie, Maastricht (2021–2022). She was Artistic Chair and Research Fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study (IEA) in Nantes, France (2023). In 2025, she was awarded the Villa Romana Prize by the Deutscher Künstlerbund, undertaking a 10-month residency in Florence, Italy, with the support of the Kunsthistorisches Institut in Florenz – Max-Planck-Institut.
VENUE
Kunsthistorisches Institut in Florenz - Max-Planck-Institut
Via Gustavo Modena 13
50121 Firenze, Italia
M020
To attend the talk no registration is necessary.
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Kunsthistorisches Institut in Florenz – Max-Planck-Institut
Via Giuseppe Giusti 44
50121 Firenze, Italia
+39 055 24911-1
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