Shared Lessons Across Cultures
Living Materials, Living Heritage
Across continents and cultures, people learned to make meaning from what the land offered most readily. Flax, clay, and wood are not simply materials - they are shared points of human experience, linking ancestral cultures of Belarus with Indigenous traditions of North America and many other regions of the world.
These materials connect cultures not because they look similar, but because they taught similar lessons.
Wood - Relationship with the Living Landscape
Forests shaped how people built homes, tools, musical instruments, ritual objects, and everyday utensils. Knowledge of wood meant knowing trees, seasons, and balance — how much to take and how much to leave.
Woodworking traditions across cultures emphasize respect for the living world. Objects were made to last, repaired rather than replaced, and passed through generations.
Wood teaches responsibility:
to work with what once lived is to accept obligation toward the land that sustains you.