Keythings

This project evolves from a deliberate effort to move research beyond the confines of language and abstract keywords, such as art practice, sustainability, waste, ecology, and pedagogy, toward material engagement with what it proposes as “keythings.” These keythings include clay, tools, storage materials, kilns, workshops, institutions, data, food, fire, bodies, residue, waste, byproduct, sustainability, climate, collapsology, and artistic practice. They are not inert objects but dynamic participants that co-constitute and quietly destabilize research, embodying complex material, ecological, and social entanglements.

Drawing inspiration from experimental approaches in critical and ecological engineering, such as those practiced by Tega Brain; the methodology positions keythings within what Bruno Latour describes as a ‘parliament of things.’^7^8 Here, human and nonhuman actors interact as equal collaborators in knowledge production. Situating ceramics and clay within this ecology reframes pedagogy as a collectively negotiated inquiry and practice as a material ecology, unfolding through a choreography of contradictions and ongoing negotiation rather than fixed outcomes.