You must provide your own mobile phone or a portable audio player, and good quality headphones in order to listen to the accompanying audio story. We are unfortunately unable to provide these items due to health and safety concerns.
Please dress appropriately for the weather.
Sunday, September 27, 2020; 9am and 4pm
Soundwalk duration: 45 minutes, world premiere.
Self-guided version also available. Please email Jacek Smolicki at info@para-archives.net if you would like to receive the soundfile and route map for the self-guided version of this soundwalk.
During the pandemic, our sense of hearing seems to have gotten sharper. Urban noises and the disruptive din of everyday life rhythms have given room to more subtle and less easily perceptible soundscapes. In this unstable period an unexpected possibility emerged to rethink how we have been connecting with, affecting, and often exploiting our lived environments on multiple levels. Can attentive listening challenge our ways of inhabiting the world? Can a short moment of aural attention to transient organisms whose lives remain usually imperceptible to us, reconfigure our daily conducts on a personal, collective, or even planetary scale?
Intertidal zones are coastal areas where sea meets the land in a ceaseless interaction of low and high tides. They are characterized by highly diverse ecosystems with multiple inhabitants capable to quickly adapt to these ever-changing conditions.
I have spent the last several months traversing such intertidal zones in and around Vancouver. I have observed and listened to its inhabitants wondering how their diligent compliance to cyclical rhythms of nature can derail our human obsession with the constant growth and progression. My attempts to connect with those intertidal critters and learn from them through attentive listening and creative field recording has quickly become accompanied by other qualitative techniques and historical research, including learning from indigenous perspectives on transformations that affected those zones, their inhabitants and their resilient stewards.
The resulting work is an audio piece intended to be listened to while walking at low tide, solitarily or collectively. It interweaves elements of creative storytelling, historical research creative field recording, and soundscape composition.
The premiere on the September 27 will include a collective walk and listening to the composition as well as a short performance concluding the event. – Jacek Smolicki
This project is part of an ongoing artistic postdoctoral research funded by the Swedish Research Council. It focuses on the history, present and future of soundwalking and field recording practices in the context of environmental humanities, philosophy of technology, and media art. The three-year project is conducted in Sweden at Department of Culture and Society at Linköping University and The School of Arts and Communication at Simon Fraser University (as a guest institution).
Jacek Smolicki is an interdisciplinary artist, designer, and researcher. His works bring historical, critical and existential dimensions to listening, recording and archiving practices in human and more-than-human realms. Besides working with historical documents, archives, and heritage, Smolicki develops other modes of mediating stories and signals from various sites and temporalities. His work is manifested through soundwalks, soundscape compositions, diverse forms of writing, experimental para-archives, and audio-visual installations. He has performed, published, and exhibited internationally (e.g. In-Sonora, Madrid, Audioart Festival, Krakow, Ars Electronica, Linz, Moscow Young Art Biennale, Museum of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Sarajevo) and currently holds an international postdoc position at Linköping University (funded by the Swedish Research Council), Simon Fraser University in Vancouver and Harvard University (with support from Fulbright Commission). He is a co-founder of Walking Festival of Sound (www.wfos.net).