Geoprocesses
2026
The exhibition “Geoprocesses” (Ģeoprocesi) explores the landscapes of the Ogre region through visual and spatial narratives, examining their historical layers and the relationship between human activity and natural systems. Drawing attention to the environmental processes that shape the Earth’s surface, the exhibition reflects on how human actions intensify, alter, or slow down these processes, and how these transformations become visible in the environments we inhabit.
Focusing on five key elements — wood, peat, gravel, soil, and water — the exhibition reveals the interconnectedness between everyday human needs and the ecological systems that sustain them. It raises questions about resource extraction, environmental change, and the possibility of balancing human activity with the long-term resilience of natural landscapes.
The exhibition takes an observant and exploratory tone, inviting visitors to look beyond familiar perceptions of nature and to encounter the environment as a dynamic and living system in constant transformation. Through research-based storytelling, exhibition texts, and sensory elements, the project encourages a deeper awareness of the visible and invisible processes shaping both landscapes and society.
For the exhibition, Tīna Alise Drupa collaborated with Dr. Phil. Anne Sauka in researching the Ogre region and developing the exhibition texts, contributing to the project’s narrative structure and environmental communication approach. The exhibition concept and design was created by designer Ance Janevica, alongside project manager Elīna Cērpa, and sound designer Krista Dintere.
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