i ron a product, as in sedio call boy, that i set up, ah, maybe about seven years ago. And then also having set up craftsbas workshop in bangalow s action an industrial area of the city. So i think, for me, i definitely tell a very different story of how what the crafted object can be and the context in which it's made. When you think about a maker in the kind of western sense, verses, you know, a crafts person in india, they're two very, very different things.
For this episode focusing on how craft, creativity and our relationship with the planet can help us rethink established narratives and contribute to addressing historical injustices of the past, we visit the Radical Acts Biennial, an initiative from Harewood House. Joining our host, journalist and author of Africa is Not a Country, Dipo Faloyin, are independent curator Ligaya Salazar and Creative Director of Tiipoi, Spandana Gopal. Plus, Claire Ratinon, organic food grower and author of Unearthed: On Race and Roots, and How the Soil Taught Me I Belong.
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