A long-term research project thinking through the interconnecting elemental forces of embodied experiences that connect to sonic, spatial and somatic experience, this work investigates ideas of collective knowledge sharing and heightened understandings of what it means to listen. Research into the vitality of the physical as a well as psychological voice in the face of sensory loss informs an interest in the affects certain experiences have on our psychosomatic presence in the world, whereby the body is often cancelled in the spaces it inhabits. This has expanded into an investigation of how sound/sonics and the body might relate to spatialisation, and in turn the temporal qualities of this research.
The project makes use of different forms to explore these questions such as curatorial projects, performance, writing and film. What underpins this work is the understanding that access is the fundamental opportunity or means to approach or enter a space, and I wish to create ways that we might do this with a desire of care.