EN
Survival Infrastructure represents a stage in my ongoing research dedicated to the desertification process in south-western Oltenia and to the interdependence between community and ecosystem. The accelerated degradation of the environment generates profound social transformations, within which female migration emerges as a structural effect. The work approaches this mobility not merely as geographical displacement, but as a systemic response to climatic and economic precarity.
— Zoița Delia Călinescu
Curatorial note
“In the current discourse on the Anthropocene, peripheral spaces are not simply zones of degradation; they become active thresholds where survival is negotiated. Survival Infrastructure—a site-specific multimedia installation characteristic of Zoița’s current artistic practice—reclaims the periphery while revealing several paradoxes. As the soil of the Romanian plains becomes less ‘productive’ in the traditional agrarian sense, it generates a different kind of productivity: mobility. The desertification of the southern Danube corridor thus becomes the catalyst for a specific social phenomenon (gendered migration), not merely a geological process.
At the same time, it overturns another logic: traditionally, plants symbolize stability (the root), while humans (especially men) symbolize mobility. Yet when the soil becomes desertified, native species disappear or ‘migrate’ through wind-carried seeds toward more fertile areas, being replaced by opportunistic or drought-resistant (invasive) species. This migratory effect is reflected in human communities as well. In Oltenian communities, men were historically the ones who migrated for seasonal labor, but the current wave of female migration represents a structural response to the collapse of the ‘home’ (the ecosystem). The woman, historically tied to the household and to the land, now becomes the ‘seed’ that departs in order to ensure the survival of those who remain.
Centered on the accelerated aridification of south-western Oltenia, Zoița’s exhibition-installation functions simultaneously as an archive of ecological transformation and as a map of human resilience. In this sense, the female body becomes the last resource for families and communities, but also the critical agent through which the relationship between soil degradation and the degradation of the social fabric is exposed. Zoița’s documentary installation Survival Infrastructure aligns with ecofeminist thought theorized by authors such as Donna Haraway, Vandana Shiva, and Maria Mies, while remaining equally grounded in the local context and in the artist’s field research.”
— Ana Daniela Sultana
Survival Infrastructure | CREART
3.03.2026 – 3.04.2026
Curator: Ana Daniela Sultana











