Entangled Life with Fungi

The exhibition at the Polish Institute Berlin, 26.09 – 18.11. 2025, curated by Marta Smolińska.

Fifth exhibition in the series “What do we take with us?” curated by Marta Smolińska.

Fungi are ubiquitous yet largely invisible. They form networks underground, in water, and in the air, influence the climate, degrade pollutants, and enable symbioses that sustain entire ecosystems. At the same time, as a metaphor for interconnectedness, exchange, and coexistence, they inspire a variety of artistic and philosophical approaches.

The exhibition “Interwoven Life with Fungi” presents works by Joanna Hoffmann and Theresa Schubert that explore the fascinating potential of these organisms. Both artists work at the intersection of art, science, and technology, developing new aesthetic approaches to a post-anthropocentric view of the world.

In her projects, Theresa Schubert explores fungi as sentient beings. In the installation “Sound for Fungi: Homage to Indeterminacy,” mycelia respond to sound frequencies, opening up new ideas about communication between human and non-human actors. In ” Growing Geometries – Tattooing Mushrooms,” she harnesses the growth forces of fungi to create visual patterns through natural processes, raising questions of authorship and cooperation.

Joanna Hoffmann, on the other hand, guides the audience into immersive virtual worlds. Her work RhiZone: [M-other] makes the rhizosphere—a complex, symbiotic network of roots, bacteria, and fungi—sensorily tangible. It opens a perspective on the hidden dynamics of the forest, characterized by interdependence and shared resilience.

Together, the works of Hoffmann and Schubert illustrate how closely human life is intertwined with non-human organisms. Fungi appear here not only as a biological reality, but also as artistic-philosophical models for thinking in networks, for coexistence, and for visions of an ecologically oriented future.