Rerooting in the Polder

27 September–16 November 2025 / Casco Art Institute: Working for the Commons, Lange Nieuwstraat 7, 3512 PA Utrecht 

Visit every Thursday–Sunday, 12:00–18:00

Exhibition opening on Saturday, 27 September, 15:00–18:00
Doors open: 15:00. Word of welcome: 16:00 

Public programs on 28 September, 4, 11, and 19 October, and 15–16 November. Details and RSVP info below


To land again, to find ground—not only beneath our feet, but within. Where do we truly live? After leaving, drifting, or being pulled away—how do we return?


Casco Art Institute: Working for the Commons is pleased to announce its 2025 Autumn artistic program, Rerooting in the Polder, an exhibition by Frisian artist and long-term Casco collaborator Wapke Feenstra. Co-initiator of the artist collective Myvillages (2003) and Rural School of Economics (2019), Feenstra has spent several decades investigating the ecologies of land—its physical, mental, and social dimensions—by tapping into local knowledges and engaging with people and the everyday. Through her work, she gives form to ways of living with the land that have eroded over time, that which persists, and the potential that lies therein.

With Rerooting in the Polder, Feenstra’s long-standing engagement turns toward the Dutch landscape, offering particular attention to the distinctive form of the polders: flat, low-lying tracts of land (re)claimed from the sea, lakes, or rivers, made agriculturally productive and protected by dikes, and maintained through an intricate network of canals, pumping stations, and drainage systems.

Rather than simply retracing its history, the project unfolds as an inquiry into what a more sustainable future for this landscape might look like. Ongoing debates around polder management and agriculture—especially amid climate crisis and ecosystem collapse—have led Feenstra to reflect critically on the limits of policy frameworks and top-down transitions. In a sector where “knowing becomes measuring” and visions for change remain elusive, she proposes an alternative lens.

In the exhibition, Feenstra approaches the polder as both a deeply personal and culturally constructed terrain. Resisting detached, abstract readings, she foregrounds how the polder is lived and experienced—through senses, emotion, embodied memory, and position—while situating these within the broader social, historical, and economic forces that have shaped the land. Thus, the polder emerges not merely as a system of spatial planning, but as a complex archive of shared practices, values, and ways of knowing.

The exhibition features both former and newly commissioned works—including large-scale textile pieces, murals, photographs, geological animations, paintings, and films—that invite visitors to attune to their own sensory and emotional relationship with the land. Both intimately felt and collectively produced, the project reflects a desire to reconnect: to return, sense anew, and root again in an ever-shifting terrain.

Bringing agriculture and culture into active conversation, Rerooting in the Polder responds to the need for a more imaginative approach to “poldering.” Feenstra argues that technical solutions prove their limits. What is needed is a cultural shift—one that moves beyond the narrow, modernist Dutch vision of landscape management, rooted in control, efficiency, and productivity—whose consequences ripple at both local and global scales.

In her approach, Feenstra also addresses how dominant visions of the polder as a purely productive landscape—physically and functionally separated from the city—have reinforced the divide between the urban and the rural. Infrastructures such as dikes and canals, along with planning policies and economic models, have entrenched this spatial and cultural separation. Challenging these inherited boundaries, the project turns to often-overlooked rural stories embedded within (sub)urban spaces, particularly in Utrecht, Leidsche Rijn, and Haarzuilens. Moreover, the artist actively engages in communal artistic inquiry into the Boterhuispolder near Leiden.

Centuries of agricultural practice, migration, and urbanization have left geological, archaeological, and cultural traces beneath the city and its surroundings. Yet, as the project underscores, uncovering these physical remnants alone is not enough. Just as crucial is engaging with rural mindsets carried across generations—modes of thinking and relating to land that, despite ongoing urbanization, continue to shape life along the urban–rural continuum, subtle and often invisible. It is in these quiet inheritances that other ways of being with the land might be reimagined.

Rerooting in the Polder marks the first chapter of a new four-year program at Casco, dedicated to continuing trajectories of ecological (un)learning through art and the practice of the commons.


Public program

28 September: Rural School of Economics Seminar – How do our grounds relate?
With Indra Gleizde, Inez Dekker, Alina Dzeravianka, Zoé Crevoisier, Wei & Water Boterhuispolder, Wapke Feenstra, and the Casco team.
Time: 13:30–17:00
Location: Casco Art Institute, Lange Nieuwstraat 7, Utrecht
Snacks, coffee, and tea provided.
RSVP: info@casco.art

4 October: From Field to Fiction – What are the waters driving us?
With Laura van Rossum, Asia Komarova, Maarten Schrama (tbc), and Wapke Feenstra.
Time: 13:30–17:00
Meeting point: Vleuten station; cycling excursion through the Haarzuilens area, ending with a shared gathering.
Snacks provided. Please bring water, waterproof clothing, and a bike.
RSVP: info@casco.art

11 October: Drilling for Stories – What’s beneath the surface?
With Kim Cohen, Herre Wynia, and Wapke Feenstra.
Time: 13:30–17:00
Meeting point: Casco Art Institute, Lange Nieuwstraat 7, Utrecht
Snacks, coffee, and tea provided.
No RSVP required

19 October: Sonic Diary – What does the changing environment sound like?
With Reza Afisina, Katja Berends, Luke Cohlen, and Wapke Feenstra.
Time: 13:30–17:00
Meeting point: Leidsche Rijn train station (Brusselplein 100, Utrecht)
Snacks provided. Please bring water, waterproof clothing, and a bike. Recording equipment is welcomed (a phone is sufficient).
RSVP: info@casco.art

15–16 November: Farmer’s Market – What’s the taste of the land?
With local farmers, artists, craftspeople, and the Rural School of Economics network.
Time: 12:00–18:00
Location: Casco Art Institute, Lange Nieuwstraat 7, Utrecht
Snacks, coffee, tea, and celebratory drinks provided.
No RSVP required

Colophon:

An exhibition with Wapke Feenstra from Myvillages and Rural School of Economics.

Rerooting in the Polder was conceived through the conversations, collaborations, and conspirations with Alina Dzeravianka, Anastasia Kamienska, Ary Slings, Asia Komarova, Bertwin Wenink, Binna Choi, Boerderij Boterhuys, Boer Peter, Charles Esche, Coöperatie Van Schier & Jan Holwerda, Elok Meubelmakerij, Emmo Grofsmid, Gele Hailu, Graham Kelly, Han Hoezen, Hans Engberts, Indra Gleizde, Inez Dekker, Josien Beltman, Joris de Jong, Jan van Schie, Joost van Schie, Julia Wolters, Kathrin Böhm, Kim Cohen, Lieske Feenstra-De Groot, Laura van Rossum, Lysbeth van Dam, Marianne Maasland, Maarten Schrama, Mieke Mul-Van Schie, MK-Gallery, Meta Knol, Nicole Roepers, Sveta Husakova, Van Abbemuseum, Wei en Water, Yuri Nikich, Zburazh Art Coop, and Zoé Crevoisier.

Daily Care & Maintenance team:
This artistic program is the result of a collective effort. At Casco Art Institute, Aline Hernández and Marianna Takou lead the curatorial process, with support from Luke Cohlen. Communication, editorial work, and translation are carried out by Cohlen in dialogue with Hernández and Takou. Production is managed by Naomi de Bruijn and Mirella Moschella. Together, the team also coordinates education, community outreach, and accessibility efforts. Hernández leads fundraising initiatives, while Takou oversees financial administration. Daniela Vazquez Icaza helped prepare the exhibition during her internship. Niloufar Nematollahi supported Hernández in the early planning stages and assisted in fundraising.

Cooperative team:
Reza Afisina
Binna Choi
Nuraini Juliastuti
Yazan Khalili
Annette Krauss

From our extended support team:
Michael Klinkenberg and Niklas van Woerden (Studio Kunstwerk), exhibition construction
Fatemeh Bagheri Toodeshki, Athina Koutsiou, Li Xiangdong, Changli Luo, Maria Tzekaki, and João Zerquera Da Silva, production volunteers
Parvaneh Karimi, food
Maria Sujecka, cleaning and maintenance
David Bennewith (colophon.info), visual identity and communication
Kopijwinkel, printing
Changli Luo, installation photography
Wang Xue Sophia, opening photography

Funders:
Rerooting in the Polder is supported by DOEN Foundation via Arts Collaboratory, Vriendenloterij Fonds, Mondriaan Fund, K.F. Hein Fonds, Gilles Hondius Foundation, Boellaardfonds, and the Municipality of Utrecht.

This activity is part of:

Where do we actually live? On unstable peat and sticky clay, along sand ridges and rivers. Pump or drown. How can we reroot, again?

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