about
close 
It is a great honour to accept the invitations from Tsinghua University and the Central Academy of the Arts in Beijing. For my work with students at these landscape design institutes, I have devised a series of projects. They reflect
the spirit in which we have approached the challenges of landscape design at the University of Applied Arts Vienna for over two decades.

Our artistic explorations, which we were able to develop with great academic freedom, led us to the very heart of
the social and economic issues represented by "landscape" today.

Looking at our surroundings through the eyes of an artist can alter and enrich the land transporting information.
This aspect meets resistance from architects, curators and local politicians. At the same time it brought us recognition as pioneers of a new quality of landscape and as "avant-gardeners".

Our design process is based on decoding the legend of a specific place, developing a core idea and pursuing that initiated change persistently. For landscape design does not end with completing a "site", just as the farmer was never "finished" on the land.

The series IT'S THE LANDSCAPE, STUPID! addresses topics that hold lasting interest for us – historical gardens,
rural regions, urban spaces and waste land as well as sports grounds.

Mario Terzic, Vienna 2014
  Zante Landscape Garden    Zakynthos island, Greece  


Even today there is a rather good price for currants of best quality, so production could be expanded and marketing considerably improved! In that way one could give Zante currants a new organic top quality identity for pastries, sport nutrition and as delicious souvenir.

Success would motivate young wine growers to stay on their island and try a new start up. Certainly some key images of proliferating „Dionysos ruins“ will be published internationally and thousands of visitors will send out postcards, thus best promoting Zante currants!

Zakynthos’ old sites as a shipwreck or Caretta caretta (an endangered regional species of turtles) will not be enough any more - ruin spotting may become the new attraction for visitors!

  PROJECT LIST