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Rights to Seeds, Rights of Seeds

Rights to Seeds, Rights of Seeds is an art installation inspired by CLIMAVORE x Jameel at RCA's research that explores traditional seed-sharing practices in Sicily and Puglia, two of Italy's most arid regions.

As part of the installation, various seed varieties are displayed in bespoke ceramic vessels–an homage to traditional seed storage methods in southern Italy and the hardy soils these seeds can endure.

Developed by Cooking Sections duo Alon Schwabe and Daniel Fernández Pascual, the work advocates seed-sharing, agro-biodiversity preservation and policy reform.

Museo delle Civiltà (2025)

In May 2025, Rights to Seeds, Rights of Seeds opened at Museo delle Civiltà, Rome.

Intended as a 'living collection', the work highlights the pressing climate challenges facing arid farmland and demonstrates the power of seed saving as a tool for resilience.

About the research

The three-year research initiative is divided into two focused research areas: one addressing the impacts of wetland draining on local buffalo populations around Istanbul, Türkiye and the other concentrating on dryland farming in southern Italy.

The project in southern Italy works with nearly 40 farms and cooperatives across Sicily and Puglia.

Farmers there have propagated more than 125 varieties of diverse peasant seeds.

The project challenges restrictive seed laws that have banned traditional seed-sharing practices, advocating for agro-biodiversity preservation and policy reform.

Monoculture Meltdown asks: how do we use the infrastructure of cultural institutions to promote societal change, and what role can they play?

Alon Schwabe, Reader in Architecture and Spatial Practice, RCA

Advocacy

CLIMAVORE x Jameel at RCA collaborates with lawyers to propose regional and national amendments to existing seed laws, using Rights to Seeds, Rights of Seeds as a vehicle to create provenance for peasant seeds and propagate them as part of their “living collection”.

According to the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), seed diversity is now being recognised at an international level.

Despite this, global seed control is still concentrated among just four companies, highlighting the need for grassroots initiatives like Monoculture Meltdown.

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