This book combines art, history and cultural studies, by way of a series of journeys on which the author and others make artworks. Each of these journeys resulted from an investigation into the meaning of an everyday substance, salt, in very different places – South Africa, Lithuania and Russia, Portugal and Haiti. Katy Beinart explores cultural meanings and everyday rituals of salt in these four journeys that link migration, trade, empire, slavery and colonialism.
Histories of salt have showed how it has been central to trade, power and capitalism, but these histories don’t offer a way of understanding salt’s poetics. Drawing on fiction, poetry and art Beinart weaves together an argument that develops a material poetics of salt, understanding how salt artworks can symbolise relationships, mobilities, migrations, memory, and intercultural connections from the past and present.
The book begins with a search for family history, and combines family memoir, travel stories, trade histories, auto-ethnographic reflection and artistic process. The journeys, artistic practices and embodied engagements with place and people this book narrates are a way into a different understanding of material entanglements and relations through sensory experience which opens up other ways of knowing.
Katy Beinart (b.1977, Birmingham) is an interdisciplinary visual artist whose artworks include sculpture, installation, public art, textiles, film, drawing and performance. After studying architecture, Katy has practiced as an artist since 2004, combining art and spatial practice to make artworks in the public realm as well as exhibiting in galleries, festivals and biennales in the UK and internationally. Recent projects and commissions include Re-Enchanted for Walk The Chalk Festival (2023), Acts of Transfer (with Lizzie Lloyd), funded by Arts Council England (2021-22), Films A Difficult Place (2023) and 2 Metre Conversations (2020) (with John Edwards), commissioned by Phoenix Art Space, and Hybrid, a permanent public art work in Braintree, Essex (2022). Recent exhibitions and events include Writing back in time (2026) at Coventry Biennial, with Rebecca Beinart; Interreligious Encounters (2026 at the University of Edinburgh), Salty workshop (2024/2025, Venice/UK), Making Space Residency (2024, Fabrica), The Power of Residents (2024, Komedia), Wriggle Room: Open Studio (2023, Towner Eastbourne, with Lydia Hunt), and Correspondences (2020/2021, Jewish Museum London/Five Years London, with Rebecca Beinart). She has worked in arts education for over 20 years and currently teaches at the University of Brighton, and Open College of the Arts.