In the southernmost territories of South America, the nomadic platform Terra Ignota offers a new approach to exploration through radical listening and collective unlearning. For over a decade, Terra Ignota has challenged conventional methodologies, replacing fixed questions with the fluid act of walking, listening, and engaging with the landscape. In this space, rocks, wind, and found objects become living archives, carrying untold stories and traces of memory.
This interview is part of the southernests series, which explores how certain artistic gestures – through listening, drifting and publishing – activate community or affective bonds across South America. Each piece begins by revisiting personal materials from the interviewee’s archive. These are not private keepsakes, but forms of inscription. Fragments that can blur the line between the intimate and the public, condensing ways of life, embodied knowledge and situated modes of transmission. In this sense, publishing becomes a way of making that blurs the visible and reorganising the common.
Text by Florerncia Curci