My good friend Jess joined me for the walk from Mawgan Porth
to Newquay today. Jess too is from North Devon. Jess too is studying her 3rd
year in Devised Theatre at Falmouth. And Jess too is indulging in a project
exploring walking for these three months. So Jess and I have quite a lot in
common at the moment. Before I began my walk, we walked together for about 3
hours every morning for 10 days, for me this was a sort of warm up for my
project, and for Jess it became a big part of her project. We would agree a
place on the map (no more than 15 minutes’ drive away) that neither of us knew
too well, meet there at 8am and then start to walk, they were meaningless
walks, they had no intended destination, only to explore a part of the map we
did not know, and to walk. These walks became a routine, and the highlight of
my day. Through walking we would discuss almost everything from trivial moans to
deep theory and philosophy. It was here that I was first able to explore in
practice the idea of mapping a thought or a memory onto a place. When I would
go home and think about things we had discussed my mind would transport me to
the exact location on the walk that we discussed that particular thing. This is
a phenomenon that I am sure I am not alone in experiencing; in fact I’d go as
far as arguing that it’s such a common thing for our brains to do that we do
not really notice it unless specifically drawing attention to it as I am now.
For me it’s something about beating down your steps, pacing through a memory,
travelling along your thoughts, gaining distance, understanding and speed, feet
to ground are as pen is to page when walking. We actively write all over the
landscape using our feet, both literally in the form of footsteps and ground
markings, but also in our minds in the form of linking specific memories or
thoughts to places or objects in places.
In my project, I am attempting to rewrite my memories as it
were, to move their location, or to copy and paste them into a new location,
and allow them to exist in that location for others to view and write for
themselves. Perhaps a good example of this is a short video I made of a large
sort of installation in Mawgan Porth, in which I remapped my memories of the
millennium on the beach by writing “Happy Millennium” in the sand in huge
letters for all to see (http://tomvinall.blogspot.co.uk/2013/11/blog-post.html). For anyone who saw this written in the
sand, their thoughts are bound to have jumped to their own memories of the
millennium. This in my mind, there is just the slightest chance that the next
time they remember their trip to Mawgan Porth they will remember the Millennium,
or visa versa and the next time they remember the millennium they will think of
the beach at Mawgan Porth. This large scale creation effectively remapped my
memory and in doing so, just possibly, maybe, hopefully, might have remapped
somebody else’s memory there too.
So anyway, Jess came to walk with me! She came up with a really interesting idea to
solve the whole “park car then get bus” issue, and to allow herself to walk for
longer. She would park at Newquay and set off towards Mawgan Porth. I would
leave Mawgan Porth at the same time (9am) and we would just meet somewhere
along the path. This reminded me straight away of a piece by performance artist
Marina Abromovic and her long term collaborator and lover Ulay, in which they
walked from opposite ends of the great wall of China and met in the middle.
However for them, the meeting held a great significance, as it would mark the
end of their relationship in both art and love. Walking towards Jess yesterday
morning was a really interesting experience; interesting because I was
constantly wondering where I would meet her, I’d always be looking to the
horizon or to the brow of the hill looking for her figure in the distance. It
was interesting too because of the anticipation of this “meeting”, this moment
along the walk which undoubtedly would hold more significance than any other.
Are we supposed to do some great act to mark its significance? Wave from afar?
Hug? Cry? Sing? It is such a significant moment that it feels it needs to be
marked, but how? Is that our responsibility? After a while the moment arrived,
as I came up the side of a sharp cliff, I saw the silhouette I had been
searching for skipping along over the top of the cliff. I waved. I took a
photo. I realised the actual moment was yet to come, this was but the prologue,
how would I mark it, what must I do. As we got closer I once again raised my
arm to wave, and as I did I felt an all too familiar feeling under my foot, and
quite slowly, quite silently, I fell. To me this was hilarious and my laughing
was almost uncontrollable, however to Jess it was slightly more concerning as
from her viewpoint I fell out of sight, and for all she knew she could have
just witnessed my demise at the hands of a sheer drop!! And there it was. The
moment was marked. This significant meeting was mapped in memory and place by a
chance accident, a fall, a slip in the mud, a mistake. I have for a while now
been a strong believer in looking to a place and a landscape for the answer if
you yourself cannot find a solution when it comes to art or thought, and on
this occasion the landscape most certainly delivered.
We slowly explored and played our way all along the coast to
Newquay as we had done so often on our previous walks together. Jess would
always comment on the amazing things you could discover by taking a path you
did not know, or straying from the path freely. About a mile from Newquay we
decided to descend down a steep set of stairs and were greeted by the most
amazing playground of caves and tunnels in the rocks below. We spend almost an
hour on this natural climbing frame at moments together, then alone and then
finding each other again. Walking gives you a freedom to see the world as a
climbing frame – it’s great.
Anyway, that’s it for now. Apologies for the length of this,
and my ridiculously frequent use of commas. I just seemed to like them tonight!
I wonder what that says about how I’m feeling? Disjointed? Out of breath? I
think its more something like my mind not being able to settle on just one
thought at a time. But it sure does feel good to have put into words some of my
conceptual thoughts about the project and what I am doing – as usual sparked by
the presence of Jess Burford. I hope at least some of it makes sense. I’d love
to hear any thoughts you might have, or responses, even if it’s just a line or
two. Just comment by clicking the link below where it says “no comments” or “1
comment” etc.
Thanks for reading! Tom.
The commas are great, like footsteps. Reading this makes me wish I was frolicking in the countryside.
ReplyDeleteMaybe you could? Walking is easy, anyone can do it... (who are you by the way?)
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