{"id":26873,"date":"2017-06-29T21:14:22","date_gmt":"2017-06-29T19:14:22","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/nrw-skulptur.net\/route\/route-salztangente\/"},"modified":"2018-09-11T17:11:32","modified_gmt":"2018-09-11T15:11:32","slug":"route-salztangente","status":"publish","type":"sculpture_maps","link":"https:\/\/nrw-skulptur.net\/en\/route\/route-salztangente\/","title":{"rendered":"Die Salztangente \/ Salt Axis"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>Franz John&#8217;s <em>Salztangente \/ Salt Axis<\/em> was designed to function as a bike path. It leads from Gronau to Bocholt through Ahaus, Vreden, Stadtlohn, S\u00fcdlohn, and Borken. The artist installed five fields of metal rods along the route, which draw attention to a specific geological and historical situation: in western M\u00fcnsterland, there is an approximately 200-million-year-old salt deposit at a depth of 1,000 to around 1,400 meters. The history of the salt is the subject of the <em>Salztangente<\/em>, from the crystalline deposit in the primeval sea to industrial salt mining.<\/p>\n<p>Bike travelers who would like to follow the trail of salt should plan for it to take about 1.5 hours. The route is clearly marked, leads through predominantly flat terrain, and is easy to complete in sections. Additional interesting public sculptures can be found in Vreden (Genth\/Mutter and Irmer). Like the <em>Salztangente<\/em>, <em>Die Solide Wirklichkeit des Bedingten \/ The Solid Reality of the Conditional<\/em> was created as part of the 2005 Skulptur-Biennale M\u00fcnsterland in Borken.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"featured_media":37873,"template":"","sculpture_maps_tempo":[15078],"sculpture_maps_region":[15071],"class_list":["post-26873","sculpture_maps","type-sculpture_maps","status-publish","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","sculpture_maps_tempo-fahrrad","sculpture_maps_region-muensterland"],"acf":{"sm_sculptures":[{"ID":27278,"post_author":"1","post_date":"2017-10-24 14:37:08","post_date_gmt":"2017-10-24 12:37:08","post_content":"The Salt Axis - Ottenstein\u2009- H\u00f6rsteloe\r\n\r\nOn the Religious Significance of Salt\r\n\r\nAlongside bread, salt plays an important role in the Judeo-Christian tradition. It indicates to a natural way of life for the believer. It signifies community and faith, while also being used to combat rot.\r\n\r\n\r\nSalt in the Bible\r\n\r\nThe vital importance of salt is depicted in the Old Testament as part of the religious sphere: Every food offering is salted (Leviticus 2:13). Newborns are rubbed with salt (Ezekiel 16:4). Elijah healed the water with salt (2 Kings 2:19). As a symbol of the permanence of a contract, God's everlasting covenant with Israel is called a covenant of salt (Num 18:19). Salt also appears as an image of devastation (Deut 29:22).\r\n\r\n\r\nAccording to an interpretation the Book of Wisdom, Lot's wife, who has been turned into a pillar of salt, has become a memorial to an unbelieving soul (Gen 29:16 and Wis 10:17). In the allegorical speech of the New Testament, salt becomes a symbol of purification through suffering. Above all, however, the dismissal of Christ's disciple is paraphrased with the image of the \"salt of the earth\" (Mt 5:13 ff), comparing his failure to the stale, no longer usable salt. Paul demands that Christian speech be seasoned with salt, that is, to be full of grace.\r\n\r\nSalt in Liturgy\r\n\r\nThe use of salt is required in the preparation ceremonies for baptism and for consecrating holy water.\r\n\r\n\r\nBaptism\r\n\r\nThe practice of administering salt to the catechumen is first witnessed by Augustine, who received the <em>sacramentum salis<\/em> after having fallen ill as a child. The out of practice custom of putting salt on the tongue of someone being baptized refers to man being the salt of the earth and probably also signifies that one is cleansed of Adam's original sin through baptism and can now live as a new man.\r\nConsecration of the Water\r\n\r\nThe custom of adding salt to the water for the ritual sprinkling was already known in antiquity and was first testified in the Roman liturgy as early as the 6th century. The salt is meant to preserve the water, which is why it is not added to baptismal water because it was not originally intended for storage. In addition to ash and wine, salt has been added to Gregorian holy water for the consecration of altars since the 8th century. \r\n\r\nStephan Wolf, priest, Sch\u00f6ppingen-Eggerode\r\n","post_title":"The Salt Axis - Ottenstein\u2009- H\u00f6rsteloe","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","post_password":"","post_name":"die-salztangente-ottenstein%e2%80%89-hoersteloe","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2018-09-16 12:44:36","post_modified_gmt":"2018-09-16 10:44:36","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/nrw-skulptur.net\/skulptur\/die-salztangente-ottenstein%e2%80%89-hoersteloe\/","menu_order":1601,"post_type":"sculpture","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":27303,"post_author":"1","post_date":"2017-10-24 14:34:26","post_date_gmt":"2017-10-24 12:34:26","post_content":"Salt Trail\r\n\r\nThousands of years ago, people were already in search of the essential mineral salt. By the Neolithic period, salting (pickling) was already a proven technique for preserving food; Egyptian and Greek sources have written texts about the significance of salt.\r\n\r\nRegarding its importance in the preservation of food, salt can be regarded \u2013 without exaggeration \u2013 as the \"bofrost (frozen food company) of pre- and early history\" (quote: Dr. Isenberg, Westf. Museum f. Arch\u00e4ologie). It was one of the most important commodities of that time and seen as a sort of \"white gold.\" A later example is the city of M\u00fcnster, which was involved in the salt trade (see the name Salzstra\u00dfe \/ Salt Street in the city center) and had an important exchange of goods with areas within what is now the Netherlands, among other regions. Surely the Deventer (Dembter) Hellweg, which ran through the county of Borken near Wessum-Alst\u00e4tte, played a similarly important roll to the better-known Hellweg that extended further south between the Lower Rhine and Weser regions.\r\n\r\nSince the Middle Ages, Hellweg has been a common name for large thoroughfares (royal roads, via regiae) and military roads (stratae publicae), and can be literally translated as \"bright, light (Hell) path (Weg).\" This folk-etymological interpretation can be found in historical literature ever since its inclusion in the Middle Low German dictionary by Schiller and L\u00fcbben.\r\n\r\nAnother possible interpretation of the word Hellweg (or older: Hallweg) arises from the Middle High German world Hal or salt source (etymologically rooted in the Celtic word Hal for salt). Thus, the term Hellweg can be understood as \"salt road\" or \"salt trade route.\"\r\n\r\nThe above-mentioned Westphalian Hellweg, a connecting road between the Rhine and the Weser dating back to the Iron Age at the latest, crossed directly through the salt extraction sites at the northern edge of the highlands, where salt was mined since the pre-Roman iron age.\r\n\r\nThe Deventer Hellweg, which has most likely been called that since before 1000, surely had great significance for the area that is Westm\u00fcnsterland today as a point of transit and as a route for the salt import from the Netherlands.\r\n\r\nDr. Erhard Mietzner, Landeskundliches Institut Westm\u00fcnsterland, Vreden\r\n","post_title":"The Salt Axis - Ahaus-Haus Horst","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","post_password":"","post_name":"die-salztangente-ahaus-haus-horst","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2018-09-16 15:18:35","post_modified_gmt":"2018-09-16 13:18:35","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/nrw-skulptur.net\/skulptur\/die-salztangente-ahaus-haus-horst\/","menu_order":1597,"post_type":"sculpture","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":27304,"post_author":"1","post_date":"2017-10-24 15:35:08","post_date_gmt":"2017-10-24 13:35:08","post_content":"Salt \u2013 Symbolism and Superstition\r\n\r\nMany elements, objects, and actions have taken on symbolic, as well as superstitious meaning. Of course, salt has also been given due consideration in this context. Already highly valued in earlier times due to its scarcity, salt was considered holy in many cultures, as well as often being regarded as a symbol of life force and protection from harm.\r\n\r\nBecause it is often obtained through evaporation, it was also seen as symbol of water and fire coming together. The grain of salt dissolving in the ocean is representative of merging the individual with the Absolute. Because of its fundamental importance to life, its ability to season and cleanse, and its light transparent appearance, salt is a symbol for both moral and spiritual powers. With particular reference to it as a seasoning, salt is also seen as a symbol of wit. In the negative sense, the salt desert is considered a symbol of infertility and condemnation.\r\n\r\nSalt is used in defensive spells. It can avert danger if thrown into a fire with holy water when a storm is approaching or a plate full of salt can be used to put out a sudden fire. Salt added to clothing protects against the evil eye, just as it generally aids against witchcraft. If bread and salt are thrown backwards into flowing water, illness is swept away. Salt is seen as an omen, especially if it's spilled, which indicates quarreling or the spilling of good fortune.\" (Der Gro\u00dfe Brockhaus, 1933)\r\n\r\nBread and salt are the symbol of a natural way of life. In the past, they were given to a bride and groom; today they are given when someone moves into a new home. Alliances and friendships were sealed through the shared tasting of salt.\r\n\r\nHanspeter Dickel, Stadtarchivar, Gronau","post_title":"The Salt Axis - Bocholt-Barlo","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","post_password":"","post_name":"die-salztangente-bocholt-barlo","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2018-09-16 16:24:57","post_modified_gmt":"2018-09-16 14:24:57","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/nrw-skulptur.net\/skulptur\/die-salztangente-bocholt-barlo\/","menu_order":1607,"post_type":"sculpture","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":27305,"post_author":"1","post_date":"2017-10-24 15:32:21","post_date_gmt":"2017-10-24 13:32:21","post_content":"The Salt of Freedom\r\n\r\nOne may not attach much importance to the salt in the shaker on the breakfast table; nevertheless, the white substance has helped drive the modernization of society. From a sociological perspective, salt mining and the salt trade are among the factors that have contributed to independence since the middle ages, particularly that of the urban bourgeoisie. As early as the beginning of the 20th century, sociologist Max Weber had already pointed out that the emergence of independent systems of rule and social orders in western cities led to the break down of feudal power structures (additional information: Salzmuseum L\u00fcneburg).\r\n\r\nHowever, this independence was only reached after skilled crafts, trade, and the arts had specialized in the cities \u2013 a development that had still not taken place in the areas surrounding them. As such, the landowning nobility became more and more dependent on the increase in knowledge and wealth found among city dwellers.\r\n\r\nSalt played a deciding role in this situation, as it was one of the most valuable commodities of the time and could only be extracted by specialists who lived in the cities. Thus, revenues from the salt trade would flow back into the cities. With wealth grew power \u2013 a process that ultimately resulted in the city bourgeoisie demanding and enforcing a share of the power.\r\n\r\nThat is how the salt of life became the salt of freedom.\r\n\r\nDr. Udo Thiedeke, Johannes Gutenberg-Universit\u00e4t, Mainz, sociologist + artist\r\n","post_title":"The Salt Axis - Borken-Burlo","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","post_password":"","post_name":"die-salztangente-borken-burlo","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2018-09-16 16:11:34","post_modified_gmt":"2018-09-16 14:11:34","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/nrw-skulptur.net\/skulptur\/die-salztangente-borken-burlo\/","menu_order":1605,"post_type":"sculpture","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":27306,"post_author":"1","post_date":"2017-10-24 14:31:52","post_date_gmt":"2017-10-24 12:31:52","post_content":"The Salt in Westm\u00fcnsterland\r\n\r\nThe salt found here is part of the Lower Rhine salt flat and extends from the Rhine through Emsland and into the Netherlands. The salt formed over 200 million years ago with the evaporation of a primeval sea and was deposited at a depth of roughly 1,000 to 1,400 meters. It is a very pure (98-99%) form of cooking salt. Since 1972, the salt has been extracted with water. This brine is a very important raw material for the chemical industry. In addition, salt is a dense host rock for caverns in which petroleum and natural gas are stored.\r\n\r\nThe salt was discovered in the search for oil and natural gas and then excavated by drilling. Good maps showing the size of the salt flat emerged with the development of seismic measurement methods. For seismic measurements, waves are produced with hammer blows, explosives, or vibratory machines at profile points. Geophones lined up in a grid-formation record the waves reflected up from the underground layers. An evaluation of the wave travel times can produce an accurate picture of the deep rock layers.\r\n\r\nGeorg Hengst, Salzgewinnungsgesellschaft Westfalen, Ahaus\r\n","post_title":"The Salt Axis - Gronau-Epe","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","post_password":"","post_name":"die-salztangente-gronau-epe","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2018-09-16 16:33:29","post_modified_gmt":"2018-09-16 14:33:29","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/nrw-skulptur.net\/skulptur\/die-salztangente-gronau-epe\/","menu_order":1561,"post_type":"sculpture","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":27307,"post_author":"1","post_date":"2017-10-24 14:59:15","post_date_gmt":"2017-10-24 12:59:15","post_content":"Salt along the Borders - Borders along the Salt\r\n\r\nFrom the time of the primeval sea, there living beings have had cell membranes that retain salt. Membranes are semi-permeable, which can cause a concentration gradient to build up along the border.\r\n\r\nConcentrations of salt create suction. Differences in concentration move organs and transport substances invisibly inside the body. Salt sets signals there. Salt only passes through porous skin with water as an element in sweat. You can taste it. With isotonic drinks, athletes replenish the body with the lost minerals. Salt is a reminder of our origins in the salty primeval sea. It is a sea of possibilities that one always carries throughout life.\r\n\r\nDr. Nicole Karafyllis, J.W. Goethe-Universit\u00e4t, Frankfurt\/Main\r\n","post_title":"The Salt Axis - Stadtlohn-Wenningfeld","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","post_password":"","post_name":"die-salztangente-stadtlohn-wenningfeld","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2018-09-16 16:39:41","post_modified_gmt":"2018-09-16 14:39:41","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/nrw-skulptur.net\/skulptur\/die-salztangente-stadtlohn-wenningfeld\/","menu_order":1603,"post_type":"sculpture","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":27309,"post_author":"1","post_date":"2017-10-24 15:19:26","post_date_gmt":"2017-10-24 13:19:26","post_content":"Imagine...\r\n\r\nTwo colossal continents gliding very slowly, but unstoppably across the earth's surface. The ocean between them continuously shrinking until the masses finally meet. Crashing and bursting, a huge mountain range emerges, stone twists and breaks.\r\n\r\nThe mountains rise higher and higher until their tips are covered with ice. Then, the stone begins to crumble on the surface \u2013 glaciers, heavy rains, and raging rivers wash the debris down the slopes into the valleys. The erosion flattens the rising mountains and, after millions of years, all that remains is a hilly landscape.\r\n\r\nIf you had been in this place three hundred million years ago, you could see the white peaks of this huge mountain range. Neither the Alps nor the Atlantic Ocean existed at that time. The nearest sea lay far beyond these primeval mountains, so moisture could hardly reach this area. As the continental landmasses continued to move, this dry landlocked region continued to sink. A tremendous geological depression extended from England to Lithuania, where the sands and clays gathered after being washed down from the mountains.\r\n\r\nIt was unpleasant here \u2013 hot, dry, and barren, a true Sahara. Wild rivers collected the heavy downpours in the mountains and led the water into enormous lakes, where it concentrated into brine, comparable to the Dead Sea today. The bright white crusts of limestone, gypsum, and salt were blinding.\r\n\r\nThe process of sinking continued, moving the entire basin even further below sea level. Around 260 million years ago, seawater made its way down through a narrow passage from thousands of kilometers north and very suddenly flooded the entire area. An inland sea replaced the historic landlocked salt lakes, allowing only a small amount of fresh seawater to get through. The climate was so dry that the water evaporated and deposited enormous salt masses within a few million years. This prehistoric salt is extracted here and is used to season our meals today.\r\n\r\nAnd what is left of the old mountain range? Most of it now lies beneath the earth's surface, with only a few protruding remnants, including the Ardennes, the Eifel, and the Harz.\r\n\r\nImagine it: You don't have to travel far to find deserts and salt lakes. It's all there, right beneath your feet.\r\n\r\nDr. Peter Westbroek, Universit\u00e4t Leiden\r\n","post_title":"The Salt Axis - S\u00fcdlohn-Oeding","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","post_password":"","post_name":"die-salztangente-suedlohn-oeding","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2018-09-16 16:57:14","post_modified_gmt":"2018-09-16 14:57:14","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/nrw-skulptur.net\/skulptur\/die-salztangente-suedlohn-oeding\/","menu_order":1609,"post_type":"sculpture","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":27310,"post_author":"1","post_date":"2017-10-24 14:41:51","post_date_gmt":"2017-10-24 12:41:51","post_content":"Where there is nothing, there must be something! \r\n\r\nHorror vacui (Latin for \"fear of empty space\") is an age-old idea that nature will not tolerate emptiness and that it will even shrink away from empty spaces. Aristotle held the opinion that the cosmos, constantly striving for a \"natural\" balance, would see to it that every location was filled with matter. As is still common today, the inclination of some people to absolutely need to fill empty spaces is explained as a horror vacui \u2013 a truly Freudian neurosis (\"fear of nothingness\").\r\n\r\nSome artists (such as Jean Dubuffet, Adolf Wolfli, David Carson, or Robert Crumb) strive to draw or paint over empty spaces (on the paper or canvas), not limiting themselves to colors, but also never-ending details, figures, outlines, lines, and just about anything that their imaginations can produce. Likewise, empty spaces in the landscape \u2013 both the visible\/above ground and the invisible\/below ground \u2013 are filled with anything that the architect, landscape designer, or underground engineer can imagination.\r\n\r\nParticularly susceptible in this context are all sorts of holes that have emerged as a \"vacuum\" in the course of exploiting natural resources (coal, ores, clay, marl, gravel, sand, or \u2013 in the present case \u2013 salt). These seem to exert an uncanny influence on humanity; once a source of raw materials has dried up, they usually fill it with everything they think should disappear forever: those who died from plague and war, domestic and industrial waste and, more recently, radioactive waste. One exception is the salt caverns in Gronau Epe, which \u2013 in contrast to the caverns in the L\u00fcchow-Dannenberg area \u2013 are filled with substances (natural gas) that are useful to humanity. A notable exception.\r\n\r\nIt is not the hole that presents the danger these days, but what has been banished to it. Instead of a \"fear of nothingness,\" a \"fear of the filling\" is becoming increasingly widespread. \r\n\r\n\r\nDr. Timothy Sodmann, Landeskundliches Institut Westm\u00fcnsterland, Vreden\r\n","post_title":"The Salt Axis \u2013 Vreden-Ostendarp","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","post_password":"","post_name":"die-salztangente-vreden-ostendarp","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2018-09-16 17:40:54","post_modified_gmt":"2018-09-16 15:40:54","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/nrw-skulptur.net\/skulptur\/die-salztangente-vreden-ostendarp\/","menu_order":1599,"post_type":"sculpture","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":27313,"post_author":"1","post_date":"2017-06-06 23:20:40","post_date_gmt":"2017-06-06 21:20:40","post_content":"The helicopter above the Berkel River in Vredener Stadtpark is not real, but rather a life-size model. Although the rotor blades are spinning slowly above it, this oak replica of the Bell Ranger 407 looks less high tech than the original because it\u2019s made out of wood. Likewise, the helicopter isn\u2019t motor-powered, but is instead driven by the nearby watermill. This underscores how the sculpture relates to its context: The surrounding historic buildings were also dismantled and rebuilt here in sight of the museum.\r\nThe helicopter model, a surreal foreign body in this environment, draws attention to the general character of the location. The sculpture \u2013 which seems to hover in the air like an oversized dragonfly \u2013 links time and space, nature and technology.\r\n\r\nAdditional information:\r\nhttp:\/\/www.vreden.de\/publish\/viewfull.cfm?objectID=f26cc34a_20ed_76a6_2cc631f387e37d71\r\nhttp:\/\/phaenomedia.org\/Helikopter.htm\r\n\r\nFurther reading:\r\n<em>Skulptur-Biennale M\u00fcnsterland, Latente Historie<\/em>, Ed. by Kreis Borken, Borken 2005, pp. 113\u2013119.\r\n","post_title":"Die solide Wirklichkeit des Bedingten \/ The Solid Reality of the Conditional","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","post_password":"","post_name":"die-solide-wirklichkeit-des-bedingten","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2018-09-16 18:10:26","post_modified_gmt":"2018-09-16 16:10:26","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/nrw-skulptur.net\/skulptur\/die-solide-wirklichkeit-des-bedingten\/","menu_order":1345,"post_type":"sculpture","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"},{"ID":27984,"post_author":"1","post_date":"2017-06-06 23:37:31","post_date_gmt":"2017-06-06 21:37:31","post_content":"As a painter and sculptor, Michael Irmer limited himself to reduced representations of the human form, which he continuously sought to express in new ways. Alike his other works, the four figures in Vreden are characterized by their elongated postures and rough surfaces. \r\nIn this work, four different sized abstract busts sit atop a row of matching pedestals. The differences in size result from the fact that the figures are depicted down to the chest, the abdomen, or all the way to the hips. Although the roughly outlined representations show no specific facial features or other bodily details, one can still recognize the figures as different types of people. \r\nWe have all likely already witnessed a similar effect in a grainy group photo in a periodical: at first glance, you think you can identify specific people, but the closer you look, the more the image seems to blur. In this way, the busts in front of the Rathaus in Vreden are not monuments to specific individuals, but instead represent the greatest diversity of people and their traits.\r\n","post_title":"Untitled","post_excerpt":"","post_status":"publish","comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","post_password":"","post_name":"ohne-titel-30","to_ping":"","pinged":"","post_modified":"2018-11-02 16:00:07","post_modified_gmt":"2018-11-02 15:00:07","post_content_filtered":"","post_parent":0,"guid":"https:\/\/nrw-skulptur.net\/skulptur\/ohne-titel-30\/","menu_order":660,"post_type":"sculpture","post_mime_type":"","comment_count":"0","filter":"raw"}]},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/nrw-skulptur.net\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/sculpture_maps\/26873","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/nrw-skulptur.net\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/sculpture_maps"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/nrw-skulptur.net\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/sculpture_maps"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/nrw-skulptur.net\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/37873"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/nrw-skulptur.net\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=26873"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"sculpture_maps_tempo","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/nrw-skulptur.net\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/sculpture_maps_tempo?post=26873"},{"taxonomy":"sculpture_maps_region","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/nrw-skulptur.net\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/sculpture_maps_region?post=26873"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}