Runaways / Karkulaiset

Tuija Tapio



The course week was filled with new places and species. The idea of my art piece started to develop as the names of the new species I learned during the day spun in my head when going to sleep. It just so happened that the real names transmuted into totally new ones mixing real and imaginary names and words. Finnish language is especially rich when it comes to naming the species. The next day I really had to concentrate in connecting the appropriate names into the right plants.

I decided to try to create new plants with rich and imaginary names. I didn´t have the knowledge or the time to cultivate the plants really from the beginning and therefore the visual appearance was enough for me. I for example used iron wire to add couple of cucumbers into a kale and an apple into an eggplant. I also used cauliflower with rowan berries and fennel with potato berries. Plants for the experiment I took from my allotment garden which is situated close to the Kumpula Botanical Garden.



I wanted to achieve the official scientific looks for the art piece and decided to built a wooden box similar to those that are used for useful plants in Kumpula Botanical Garden. For the same reason I also decided to place my box with newly crafted species next to Kumpula Botanical Garden´s fence to catch the idea of scientific cultivation and laboratory circumstances. I wouldn´t dare to take the art piece inside the garden. I found a perfect spot alongside the Botanical Gardens fence. One can see the plants with name tags inside the garden.






The perfect spot had a hole in the fence. It added one more meaning to the artwork. The hole in the fence made me think of a prison or carefully guarded scientific laboratory and possibility to run away from it. The idea reminded me of the scary stories I´ve seen in science fiction films when something dangerous, for example diseased animals, gets into the nature by an accident and causes a lot of destruction. After these thoughts my created plants transformed into escaped prisoners in my head. I then decided not to add the name tags in them since it is obvious that the liberated runaways wouldn´t wear tags anymore.


The hole in the fence made me think more of the dangers there may be in scientific manipulation of plants and cultivation. What in the end will happen to us when interfering with the diversity of the nature gets too far? The resources for cultivation are enormous and the need for efficient food supply grows constantly. The food industry may use science in immoral ways to achieve the goal. Financial ambitions may not be beneficial to the nature.

I want to think that my runaway plants don´t mean any harm for anyone and are just confused from the freedom. That´s why they just stay in the box close to their original birthplace leaning on each other.


A great reward from my work was when my fellow students couldn´t recognize the plants at first glance.


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