In 2013, three artists, Naomi Heath, Jane Lloyd-Francis, and I under the name, Performance-in Practice (PiP), met on a weekly basis at Aberystwyth Arts Centre in Wales to share and engage in developing practice as research. Each of us had a common interest and passion for walking, the Welsh landscape, and perception. After an initial number of weeks sharing practical tasks and materials, we embarked together on Listening to Water.
Heath, Lloyd-Francis, and I spent several months locating and visiting ancient well sites in Ceredigion and Powys, counties in Mid West Wales. The visits included trips to Ffynnon Badarn (Saint Badarn’s Well), Llanafan Fawr, Ffynnonau Penegeoes, Ffynon Tyfi and St Cadfan’s. The practice investigated sensory connections to the landscape and questioned how a listening practice might inform our sense of place. In the practical explorations I sought to explore how listening, as a practice, can move away from solely being conducted by the ear to be a practice undertaken with the whole body. I wanted to explore how attention is shaped by resonances, vibrations, and forms of intuition. I describe this as a vibrant practice.
This mode of working describes a form of attention shaped by attitudes that are cultivated over time and sensitive to the landscape, to found objects, and to natural phenomena observed by each of us on each site visit. This position is informed by political theorist and philosopher Jane Bennett who, writing on vital materialism, states, ‘an anthropomorphic element in perception can uncover a whole world of resonances and resemblances — sounds and sights that echo and bounce far more than would be possible were the universe to have a hierarchical structure’ (2010: 99).
This horizontal position incorporates an awareness of how inanimate and animate entities are entangled, and informs the approach taken by the three of us recognizing, following Spinoza, that all things are animate ‘albeit in different degrees’ (cited in Bennett 2010: 5).
By attuning to the landscape, and to our bodies’ response to what we encounter, we also aim to cultivate a historiographic sensing inspired by Diane Ackerman’s writing in A Natural History of the Senses, who writes, ‘What is most amazing is not how our senses span distance or cultures, but how they span time. Our senses connect us intimately to the past, connect us in ways that most of our cherished ideas never could' (1991: xvi).