For their research residency at G39, the Heavy Water Collective first engaged with a selection of artefacts held in the Special Collections at Cardiff University, before ‘setting up camp’ in the G39 Library to spend time developing visual responses to the objects found. Artefacts relating to witchcraft, religion, childbirth, colonialism, war and cartography have been central to the collectives’ artistic research.
Charms and Chasms
G39, Cardiff
51.48600889999999,-3.1646778
Charms and Chasms
Witch's Ladder
The work I developed at G39 responded directly to the objects and documents I had encountered in the Special Collections at Cardiff University earlier in the residency. Having found a ghostly mark in a book about witchcraft that was reminiscent of witches ladders, I was able to find instructions on how to make one, complete with an incantation. 1
Whether historically accurate or make believe, the witch’s ladder is an interesting process of ritualistic knotting that encapsulates important aspects of faith. The practice summons the human will to hope, desire and / or protect the things that are cared about deeply. I have developed an artefact based on these instructions, first carving nine objects taken from the Special Collection out of soap before constructing a complexity of knots and braids. I tied these objects into the threads using a knotting technique, while focusing on these very specific set of object-intentions. The objects include (from top to bottom):
- Alectorious: A non-precious stone found in the gizzard of a young castrated cockerel. The stone is believed to be an effective amulet in generating courage and boldness.
- Elm Tree: An amulet that protects all nearby plants and flora
- A Bidder’s Staff: A staff adorned with wedding garlands, held by the ‘bidder’. Historically, the bidder is a joyful, witty individual who bids the guests to witness the marriage of two people. In the context of the work, the garland represent the union of all organic matter, as part of a ritual of reconnecting with nature.
- Left Ovary: An amulet to protect women’s bodies, and to ward off those who seek to control them
- Mountain and Cave: An amulet that works to protect indigenous lands and their communities
- Right Ovary: An amulet to protect women’s bodies, and to ward off those who seek to control them
- Non-human: An amulet to protect all non-human bodies from harm and neglect
- Annulus: A ring or loop that connects us to our past, present and future blood relatives. An object that represents continuity, time travel and change
- Island: A place to reflect, to learn, to discuss, to forgive, to change, to listen.
In these selected experimental works, witch, native, commons, mineral, uterus and non-human are all brought together as sites of extraction under capitalism.
Distortions:
Creating something methodologically ritualistic, in a way that reconnects to the past, creates an opportunity to re-establish bonds with our collective ancestry while reigniting a desire to deepen our relationship with the network of matter in which we are entangled. Even the light of the domestic scanner, combined with ritualised movement using the hands, can reveal new methods of thinking and seeing through the thickness of time.
AN ACCOUNT OF THE VOYAGES
UNDERTAKEN BY THE
ORDER OF HIS PRESENT MAJESTY
FOR MAKING
Discoveries in the Southern Hemisphere,
And successfully performed by
COMMODORE BYRON, CAPTAIN CARTERET,
CAPTAIN WALLIS and CAPTAIN COOK
In the DOLPHIN, the SWALLOW, and the ENDEAVOUR:
Drawn up from the Journals which were kept by the several COMMANDERS; And from the Papers of JOSEPH BANKS, Esq:
By JOHN HAWKESWORTH, L.L.D.
IN THREE VOLUMES
Illustrated with CUTS, and a great Variety of CHARTS and MAPS relative to Countries now first discovered, or hitherto but imperfectly known.
VOL. I
LONDON.
Printed for W. STRAHAN; and T. CADELL in the Strand,
MDCC LXXIII.
These distortions resulted in the facial expressions of the colonisers becoming central — as they gaze out through the digital folds created by my body working with technology. We see huddles of men, looking in all directions, seemingly plotting their next move. Bodies bulge out of the page, and absences appear in return; spaces created over time through light, movement and sensors. As an artist, I often see and experience through technology, and in turn, the technology sees and experiences through both me and the data we collect together. Through my artistic practice, technology has become a cyborgian extension of my direct bodily engagement with my environment — and with the histories contained within it.
The glitchy space that this method opens up reveals a landscape of injustice in which we can find ravines, sinkholes, earthquakes, volcanoes, quarries and swathes of absence. It also provides a place for the discovery of unspoken truths, speculative fictions, and new futures. Pushing the boundaries of the image in this way enables a playful deconstruction and reconstitution without shying away from the brutalities that the images represent.
These glitched visualisations disrupt power dynamics, subvert narratives, agitate truths and create opportunities for re-readings. If we look through the lens of Legacy Russell’s Glitch Feminism Manifesto, these works seemingly dissent against capitalism. As Russell states, “the glitch creates a fissure within which new possibilities of being and becoming manifest”. The images are purposeful, destabilising errors, and through their distortions the ugly truths of history are laid bare.
Through an interrogation of this object, new works have been developed that destabilise its content in a contemporary context. As massive Western corporations continue to destroy communities and their ancestral lands, in the pursuit of wealth from natural-resources such as water, mining and agriculture, I ask how much has actually changed. Through the fissures of the glitch, we see the stark repetition of history, and asks for creative solutions in the context of the resulting ecological crisis. In collaboration with technology, itself a product of the mining industry, I work with its geology to deconstruct the systemic forces that have sought to destabilise the human and more-than-human majority.
Beyond the Woods
To develop new work during our Artist Residency at G39, I only used documents found earlier in the residency, when I was undertaking a focussed period of research at Cardiff University Special Collections. I reappropriated all the documents I found, as a way to decontextualise them, universalise them and infuse them with a narrative charge.
Archival materials have infiltrated my work for years, and the Special Collections was the second archive/institution with whom I worked. Yet, for the first time during this residency, I asked myself questions on the nature of archives, on the types of artefacts selected to become part of an archive and on the ways artefacts are named and by whom. Staff at the Special Collections (whom I wholeheartedly thank) are very much aware of the ethical responsibilities and questions generated by the process of collecting and archiving artefacts.
When I started to develop work at G39, these concerns were foremost in my mind. How words influence and sometimes dictate the reading of an image became the catalyst of the video work Beyond The Woods, which I developed during the residency.
Making the video work
The video work narrates letters written by soldiers about their experiences of the front during the First World War. I tried to capture the essence of the letters, but rewrote them slightly, in order to make the testimonies both a‑temporal and difficult to locate. I wanted to amplify the horror of wars, while using quiet words and language. The constant disjunction between what is heard and what is seen converge into an emotional place of unease.
The video work went through many iterations and continued developing many months after the end of our residency at G39. I spent time re-working the archival images that were to become the visuals accompanying the video work Beyond The Woods. All images were digitally manipulated, so that I could erase buildings or hand writings. I also transformed all visuals into postcards to accentuate the discrepancy between what is heard and viewed. Postcards are associated with leisure, written small talks about the weather and other banalities, but in the video work, they become the support of short and poignant testimonies.
Initially, to create the soundtrack, I narrated all the soldiers’ letters used in the video, but I felt that my strong accent was too much of a distraction, so I employed actors to do the voice over.
Beyond The Woods pits gravity against levity, through the subtle appropriation of archival images and letters written by soldiers, to explore conflicts and their long-lasting emotional impact.
Method: The Phantom Had Dissolved
“And here the sweltering air thickened before him, and a transparent citizen of the strangest appearance wove himself out of it.
A peaked jockey’s cap on his little head, a short checkered jacket also made of air. A citizen seven feet tall, but narrow in the shoulders, unbelievably thin, and, kindly note, with a jeering physiognomy. The life of Berlioz had taken such a course that he was unaccustomed to extraordinary phenomena. Turning paler still, he goggled his eyes and thought in consternation:
‘This can’t be! …’
But, alas, it was, and the long, see-through citizen was swaying before him to the left and to the right without touching the ground. Here terror took such possession of Berlioz that he shut his eyes. When he opened them again, he saw that it was all over, the phantasm had dissolved.”
1 The Master and Margarita, Mikhail Bulgakov, London Collins and Harvill Press, 1967, London
Graphite
In the hot July days of Cardiff I Spent my time at G39 drawing. So little time do I have to draw…the paintings absorb this practice into their intricacy. So on this residency I luxuriated in the scratch of graphite on paper, sharpening my pencils methodically and often, allowing rolls to build up in the corner of my pencil tin and those little spiky shards of graphite growing in between like crystals. And loading these on to my finger to smear clouds and trees in to being. The ephemeral gust of the soul defined in the space of graphite removed, of the line erased, so that the soul becomes only an absence. The wonderful thing of materiality in which the essence and action of material replicates the act it attempts to define, translates words scratching through history into these marks, assembling themselves from both matter and the equivalently abstract scribble of words, hieroglyphic, like Henri Micheaux’s mescaline drawings, laid like stains between pages. Matter and emptiness. And brings to my mind the 21 grammes experiment in which the soul departing the body leaves an absence of 21 grammes. Or Camus, ‘from this inert body on which a slap makes no mark the soul has disappeared.’
And this July heat also brought to mind both the opening scene of the Master and Margarita where the devil emerges into a sweltering Moscow, where the air shimmers and no one believes their eyes, but also the unbearable heat which torments Pontius Pilate in the interrogation of his prisoner, which hinges the book.
And, an understanding of time in which all time is present and moments are merely gliding against each other. And figures emerge between worlds and between times. Kippfiguren.