Peer-review of Jane Remm’s exhibition

Location:
TLÜ, Terra galerii

Start Date:
12.02.2026

Start Time:
16:00

End Date:
12.02.2026

On Thursday, February 12 at 16:00–17:30, a public review and opening of the third exhibition of the doctoral project of Jane Remm “Moths are chewing the uneven fabric of life,” will take place at the Terra Gallery of Tallinn University.
The doctoral thesis is supervised by Dr. Urve Sinijärv (Tallinn Botanical Garden), the exhibition reviewers are Prof. Linda Kaljundi (Estonian Academy of Arts) and Dr. Nelly Mäekivi (University of Tartu).


The first signs of spring are out there – the sky is higher, tits are singing of spring, icicles and noses are dripping like birches sap. How did our ancestors, who spent the long dark autumn and winter in the dirty and cold farm houses, perceived the arrival of new light? Jane Remm’s exhibition “Moths chew the neven fabric of life” focuses on the everyday and experiential connection of traditional human culture with other species and local nature. Through mutual interdepence, people have been connected to plants and animals, forests and waters. This connection is expressed in metaphors and symbols used in language and images to this day, such as plant and animal-named patterns and the transcriptons of bird songs, as well as conventions when communicating with nature. Jane Remm is interested in the bodily and everyday interweaving with other life forms, (women’s) connection with local nature and its symbolic expression in traditional culture, patterns, food, healing – in the fabric of life. Through art, she creates a dialogue between the traditional ecological knowledge of our ancestors and contemporary ecology and environmental humanities and explores how we can learn from other lfe forms. The more diverse life, the more connections, vitality and love.

The exhibition “Moths chew the neven fabric of life” is the third peer-reviewed event of Jane Remm’s doctoral project “Art’s (artist’s) possibilities for relating to nature from representation to co-creation and ecological art interventions”. The exhibition “Moths chew the neven fabric of life” is open from January 19 to March 8 at the Terra Gallery of Tallinn University (Terra House, 2nd floor).

Jane Remm is an artist and art educator, lecturer at the BFM at Tallinn University and doctoral student at Estonian Academy of Art. Jane Remm’s work focuses on the representation of experience of nature, co-creation and communication with different life forms. In her artistic practice, she seeks ways to act more locally, more sustainably and meaningfully in collaboration with humans and nonhumans. As a visual artist with a background in painting, a teacher, and a artistic researcher, she finds that art’s way of creating knowledge about the world is special, valuing manual work and collaboration as an opportunity to perceive oneself as part of nature.

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Posted by Irene Hütsi
Updated

Doctoral School