An artist's book composed of fragments of   texts from different eras and contexts—literary, science fiction,   philosophical, scientific—all centered on the theme of the subterranean.
	Conceived   by visual artist Natália Trejbalová in collaboration with the   researcher and art historian Stella Succi, the book accompanies the film 
Never Ground, supported by the 13th edition of Italian Council, and incorporates video stills as part of its visual apparatus.
Never Ground is an artist's book composed of fragments of   texts from different eras and contexts—literary, science fiction,   philosophical, scientific—all centered on the theme of the subterranean.   This transhistorical, non-encyclopedic collection includes, among   others, excerpts from Reza Negarestani, 
Jussi Parikka, Ursula K. Le   Guin, Athanasius Kircher, Jules Verne, and Helena P. Blavatsky, and   presents itself as a subjective and partial window onto the connection   between the subterranean and the extraterrestrial. Discourses on the   underground, emblematic of many urgent contemporary issues such as   resource extraction and the concept of deep time, highlight the profound   link between belowground exploration and technological advancement.   This relationship, particularly evident in the nineteenth century   (represented by many of the texts included), resonates strongly today,   as we witness a new space race that points toward emerging forms of   extraterrestrial extractivism and colonialism.
 
	Natália Trejbalov (born in 1989 in Košice, Slovakia) is a multidisciplinary artist based in Milan.