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17th Conference of the Society for Artistic Research (SAR)

Life Makes a Bend and Nests in it

Presented by: Fiona Hallinan
πŸ—“οΈ Thursday, 25 June β€” 10:50am - 11:30am (40 mins)
Presenters
Image
Life Finds a Bend and Nests in it
Abstract
Life Makes a Bend and Nests in it is the working title for a nascent research project by artist Fiona Hallinan. This project stems from a broader collaborative research practice, the Department of Ultimology, which works to produce artworks and activities dedicated to paying attention to β€œendings”. The presentation will begin with an introduction to the work of the Department of Ultimology in the context of endangered conceptual worlds, and will then present Life Makes a Bend and Nests in it as its current project in development.
Life Makes a Bend and Nests in it looks at the relationships between an endangered plant family, bryophytes, and the dedicated human individuals working to nurture, conserve and share knowledge of them. The project asks what repository could store vital knowledge such as this? And more broadly how can deep, embodied knowledge be both disseminated and preserved for future generations?
This project proposes that the lullaby, the genre of infant-directed music, could act as a repository and form of dissemination for endangered conceptual worlds, in this case knowledge of endangered plants.
The project will take the form of a three year process documenting the making of a hybrid documentary that gathers knowledge into the relationships that dedicated individuals have with the plant family of bryophytes, in particular sphagnum moss. This will include visits to laboratories and greenhouses where moss is propagated, landscapes where it is being implanted and spaces where imaging is used to document their spores. These visits will work towards generating a song cycle of lullabies, working both with a select number of vocal artists and sound designer Brendan Jenkinson. The project encompasses ongoing research into the lullaby as form and draws on literature and oral interview sources to explore this genre as a repository of knowledge. The research continues from an initial development period in 2023 funded by the Arts Council of Ireland.
Biography
Dr Fiona Hallinan is an artist, researcher and filmmaker based between Ireland and Belgium. She co-founded the Department of Ultimology, a research practice for paying attention to endings (encompassing that which is perceived to be passing into irrelevance or redundancy or the extinction or endangerment of material and immaterial entities), which was the subject of her doctoral project at LUCA School of Arts, where she currently teaches. Her work is informed by artistic research including collective reading groups and instigating multi-form projects around endings. She has exhibited internationally including at IMMA, Ireland and Kunsthal Gent, Belgium and her film Making Dust is in the Arts Council of Ireland Collection.