Leonardo Hidalgo Uribe
Colours from living lands
A multi-sited ethnography of human–environment relationships in bio-based dyeing practices
100538
Tulossa pian
Colours from living lands: A multi-sited ethnography of human-environment relationships in bio-based dyeing practices rethinks biocolours as an entanglement of practitioners, organisms, materials, and environments. Grounded in ecological anthropology and relational approaches to design, this work combines ethnography and practice-led research across Southern Finland, the Northwest Amazon, and Southern Japan. Through apprenticeship, walking, foraging, cultivating, and reflective making, it examines how colour emerges through embodied engagement and ecological rhythms. The study proposes a framework for future colour practices that encompasses embodied experiences, temporal variations, and adaptive practices. By situating colour within specific territories, the work advances a more relational and resilient approach to textile colour design.
Leonardo is a textile designer and researcher. His work explores biocolours, examining the intersection of local ecological knowledge and crafts. His approach combines ethnography and practice-led research, focusing on the relationships among place, materials, and colour through fieldwork documentation and textile practice. His work has been exhibited in Bogotá, New York, Helsinki, Eindhoven, and London.