Introduction: Rocky Futures
A live Zoom conversation with a glacial erratic situated in the Canadian Shield of Eastern Manitoba.
Introduction: Rocky Futures Read More »
A live Zoom conversation with a glacial erratic situated in the Canadian Shield of Eastern Manitoba.
Introduction: Rocky Futures Read More »
A live Zoom conversation with a glacial erratic situated in the Canadian Shield of Eastern Manitoba.
Rocky Mobilities – Lynne Pearce Read More »
A live Zoom conversation with a glacial erratic situated in the Canadian Shield of Eastern Manitoba.
Moving Rocks; Rocks on the Move – Tim Edensor Read More »
A live Zoom conversation with a glacial erratic situated in the Canadian Shield of Eastern Manitoba.
Erratic Conversations – Sarah Fuller Read More »
Quiddity: The Sarsen Stones of Avebury Fay Stevens The UNESCO World Heritage Site of Avebury (Wiltshire, UK) is an ancient stony archaeological place constructed using local sarsen stones of post-glacial Cenozoic silicified sandstone. The stones are formed through a petrification process in which silica-rich fluids seep into voids (created by rocks, wood, bones, shells) and
Quiddity: The Sarsen Stones of Avebury – Fay Stevens Read More »
Wild Country Clare McCracken The granite rocks of Mt Buffalo National Park (Victoria, Australia) are plentiful, charismatic, and large. The 300m vertical Gorge rockface is one of the largest cliffs in Australia. Climbers scale it throughout the summer months staying overnight on precarious camp beds dangling from ropes. However, the majestic rocks of the mountain
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https://vimeo.com/981858854?share=copy Aggregate: Glittery stumbles around Blackhill Quarry with Edna Lumb in hand Fritha Jenkins In this conversation I extend research which first took shape in the exhibition, Aggregate: Fritha Jenkins and Edna Lumb, curated by Catrionia McCara at Leeds Arts University in 2018. Aggregate constituted an experimental curation open to the public in a constant
Deep Weathering at the Rest Area (or, making jam in the “nation’s food bowl”) Kaya Tatjana Barry “Deep weathering” is a process that takes millions of years of seasonal wetting and drying of certain rocks to produce high levels of iron-oxide in organic material. The result may be a rich, red soil, which is perfect
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They are breathing: living rocks and multispecies consensus Perdita Phillips For some time I have been grappling with how to use geological metaphors to make connections between people, ecosystems and physical processes, that might help unravel some of the more intractable ecological issues that surround us. Cultural theorist Astrida Neimanis and I wrote about the
They are breathing: living rocks and multispecies consensus – Perdita Phillips Read More »
terrain erratique Brass Art Erratics, meteors, scholar stones and hag stones infuse our artistic practice. We use them to think through temporal concerns – the out-of-time-ness of a meteor, or the slow movement of a glacial erratic in comparison to human action. We are particularly interested in the part standing in for the whole –
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