Gardening Teacher Soil
Joskowitz moderates the "Philosophical Salon" three or four times a year , where he conducts intensive one-on-one talks with a well-known guest - in the past these were, for example, Raoul Schrott, Thea Dorn and Wolfram Eilenberger. The organizer is the cultural department of the Jewish community. At the next edition on November 17, Joskowitz will meet the former Minister of State for Culture, Julian Nida-RĂ¼melin. Because of Corona, the conversation will not take place in front of an audience, but will be broadcast online via video stream. gartenlehrer Even if Joskowitz now only cooks privately, he still deals with culinary art – on a theoretical level. He is currently writing a cultural history of man, he tells us. "For me, the kitchen is something like the primeval space of culture," he claims. "I am particularly interested in the question: what happens at the fire when the animal has been killed and the human being is relieved for a moment from the pressure of finding food?" Joskowitz' answer: "A kind of free space is created in which important questions are negotiated: Who is included? Who can be eaten? How do we distribute the loot? These questions are as relevant today as they were at the beginning of human history.” The tea in the thermos is slowly running out, but the autumn sun still warms us. Joskowitz leads us through the winding garden in which various artists have left their mark. Paintings brushed onto pieces of wood recovered from crumbling garden sheds lean between the trees. Joskowitz is already planning the next exhibition with the KVTV collective. It is supposed to take place next spring, the location has not yet been decided. "Koi Pond" is the title. “The koi pond is a metaphor for the art business. Everyone who swims in it competes to be the prettiest, get the most attention, and create the most value.