
it's not (o)ur land....
Site specific art has evolved from making intervention in the site to a process based conversation between multiple stakeholders and work towards a public sphere of multiple participation. Land has been one of the primary engagement of site based practice and landscape study emerged as direct engagement with site. The tradition of landscape representation has always been an outsiders point of view of a specific site where it has been always limited to the interpretation of the point of view of the beholder.W. J Mitchell referred landscape as a verb and political site of multiple ownership of process, practice and territory. Situating landscape study from an one point perspective to a critical point of view of a reversed perspective where the beholder is not outside but inside the spectrum of multiple engagement of people and land. In the process study becomes an interdisciplinary dialogue between different forms of practices existing in the site and transform the study into reciprocal process of collective engagement in reference to private spaces of multiple communities.










