You don't need soil to grow - The Eriskay Connection
You don't need soil to grow
NOVEMBER 2024
  • Benedetta Ristori (IT)

 25

225 × 271 mm
48 pages
English
Cahier
TEC129
First edition: 600
9789493363106
  • You don't need soil to grow - The Eriskay Connection
  • You don't need soil to grow - The Eriskay Connection
  • You don't need soil to grow - The Eriskay Connection
  • You don't need soil to grow - The Eriskay Connection
  • You don't need soil to grow - The Eriskay Connection
  • You don't need soil to grow - The Eriskay Connection
  • You don't need soil to grow - The Eriskay Connection
  • You don't need soil to grow - The Eriskay Connection
  • You don't need soil to grow - The Eriskay Connection
  • You don't need soil to grow - The Eriskay Connection
  • You don't need soil to grow - The Eriskay Connection
  • You don't need soil to grow - The Eriskay Connection

Photography and interviews:
Benedetta Ristori

Design:
Carel Fransen

Lithography:
Gaëlle van den Dool (Wilco Art Books)

Production:
Wilco Art Books (NL)

Berlin is a city characterised by its international population and gentrification. Inspired by sociologist Zygmunt Bauman’s concept of ‘liquid modernity’, Benedetta Ristori (IT) examines how contemporary society is defined by change and uncertainty.

You don’t need soil to grow shows how individuals, particularly expatriate women, find their identity and sense of belonging in a pre-existing urban fabric. Through intimate portraits taken in rigid urban spaces, Ristori captures the tension between these women’s freedom to reinvent themselves and their fleeting connection to the city. Despite the differences in their stories and motivations, a common thread is the courage to take risks and the ability to face challenges alone.

In parallel, Ristori’s project also focuses on the German Kleingärten (small gardens), which provide a refuge within the urban world. These communal green spaces, scattered throughout Berlin, represent stability and allow the individual to reconnect with the earth.

Ristori invites the reader to reflect on their own relationship with the places they inhabit. The title of the book, inspired by plants that thrive in concrete environments, highlights the theme of the project: living without a fixed foundation, much like the women portrayed in her photographs.

With You don’t need soil to grow, Ristori questions what it means to belong in an age where the only constant is change.

Benedetta Ristori (1995) is an Italian photographer based in Rome whose work focuses on the relationships between form and space, and the ways everyday objects and landscapes serve as symbols of the connection between internal and external realities. Ristori engages in both portrait and documentary photography, often focusing on sociological and territorial aspects. Her projects are typically long-term, allowing her to develop a thorough understanding of the environments and communities she photographs. Ristori’s work has been exhibited in both national and international venues. Notable exhibitions include those at Scuderie del Quirinale, Triennale Milano, Palazzo delle Esposizioni in Rome, Galerie Binome in Paris, Plato Gallery in Prague, and Si Fest in Italy. Her photography has also been published in several prominent publications, such as Repubblica, VICE, Die Zeit, Forbes, and Vogue Italia.

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