Senses & Sensing – The Ocean Memory Project https://oceanmemoryproject.org A Cross Disciplinary Approach to Global Scale Changes Mon, 19 Feb 2024 00:15:32 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.4 https://oceanmemoryproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/cropped-OMP_Logo_Hand_1_WHonTransp-32x32.png Senses & Sensing – The Ocean Memory Project https://oceanmemoryproject.org 32 32 Oysters as an Agent of Ocean Memory https://oceanmemoryproject.org/oysters-as-an-agent-of-ocean-memory/ Sun, 12 Nov 2023 15:00:47 +0000 https://oceanmemoryproject.org/copy-of-senses-submerged/

Oysters as an Agent of Ocean Memory

Oysters as an Agent of Ocean Memory

The Eastern Oyster has existed on the coast of Sapelo Island for thousands of years, recording environmental conditions in its shell. As conditions change, the oysters move but leave the legacy of their shell reefs which slows coastline change. This Ocean Memory of the Oyster has repeatedly appeared through time on Sapelo Island, not only in the coastal waters, but also in human history and memory. Oyster shells were part of indigenous shell rings on the island; later oyster shells, likely including some from the archaeological remains, were used in tabby plantation constructions. 

As the previously enslaved Gullah Geechee people built their homes following the civil war, the sturdy tabby continued to contribute to their buildings, and now are a critical part of coastal protection infrastructure on the island. Our team, composed of an oceanographer, an anthropologist, an archaeologist, and a community leader, will skillfully interweave the story of the oyster as an agent of ocean memory to show how past presence of the oyster influences modern processes. 

This narrative will be shared as a open-access academic journal article, with additional outputs including plans for coastal protection on Sapelo Island to benefit the Hog Hammock community, an oyster-centered art installation in the Savannah airport, and an online compilation of our narrative and resources on Ocean Memory and Sapelo Island. The installation and associated QR code link to the online resources will serve as a way to disseminate our thoughts through a publication and through art.

Team Leader:
Kendall Valentine
Kendall Valentine

Dive Master

Team Members:
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Making, Losing, and Recovering Forgotten Memories at Oceanic Interfaces https://oceanmemoryproject.org/making-losing-and-recovering-forgotten-memories-at-oceanic-interfaces/ Fri, 22 Sep 2023 15:00:47 +0000 https://oceanmemoryproject.org/copy-of-invisible-kelp-forest-from-smell-to-sound/

Making, Losing, and Recovering Forgotten Memories at Oceanic Interfaces

Making, Losing, and Recovering Forgotten Memories at Oceanic Interfaces

Making, Losing, and Recovering Forgotten Memories at Oceanic Interfaces: Performance-Ritual in coastal Portugal

(Portuguese below; link to film here)

This project is a performance-ritual on the Portuguese coast that aims to provide illustrative and embodied material about the role of oceanic interfaces as sites for recovering memories that have been forgotten or lost. The investigation asks: 

Can memories be preserved across species?

  • How can a human body be situated such that it is invited to remember amphibianness, or remember extinct creatures that inhabited the intertidal zones, or other distantly related forms of life? 

Can memories be preserved, in the body, across generations, even in the case of a nonexistent archival record? 

  • Can bodies find ways of experiencing the intertidal zone that remind them of something they didn’t know they had forgotten? How can objects on the sites, fishs skins, seaweed, participate in this?

What does a human body need to “shed” in order to access ancient memories that span temporal scales far beyond a human lifetime, to feel “at home” in a perpetual state of flux? 

  • Whether in a slow walk, a crawl, a stand, or something else, what needs to be forgotten/remembered in order to haptically understand the intertidal zone as gradual shifts on a scale of tens of thousands of years?

Following 5 days of a residency, two gatherings took place in the first weekend of October 2023, in Salir do Porto and in Nazaré – two sites carefully selected given their geomorphological as well as aesthetic properties. Nazaré – an interface between land as we see it and land underwater in the form of a large underwater canyon – is home to some of the world’s largest waves, largest sand particles, and various fossils. Salir do Porto is a meeting of numerous interfaces: salt water and fresh river water, mud of four varieties and a sand dune, beach and marsh. Understanding sand grain size as a memory agent of wave activity, and spacial distribution as a memory trace of the coast’s geomorphological evolution, we inhabit these sites in a durational performance-ritual, from high to low tide, and listen, learn, sense, remember. 

Watch a 4-part mini series about this research gathering here.

Stay tuned for a collaborative concept paper on the subject of oceanic interfaces as affordances for recovering lost memories.

Descrição do projeto em português:

Fazer, desfazer e recuperar memorias esquecidas nas Interfaces oceânicas: performance-ritual na costa portuguesa

Este projeto é uma performance-ritual na costa portuguesa que visa fornecer material ilustrativo e corporificado sobre o papel das interfaces oceânicas como locais de recuperação de memórias esquecidas ou perdidas. A investigação pergunta: 

As memórias podem ser preservadas entre as espécies?

  • Como pode um corpo humano ser situado de tal forma que seja convidado a lembrar-se da condição de anfíbio, ou a lembrar-se de criaturas extintas que habitavam as zonas entremarés, ou de outras formas de vida distantemente relacionadas?

As memórias podem ser preservadas, no corpo, através de gerações, mesmo no caso de não haver registo arquivo?

  • Os corpos podem encontrar maneiras de vivenciar a zona entremarés que os lembrem de algo que não sabiam que haviam esquecido? Como podem os objetos dos locais, peles de peixes, algas, participar disso?

O que um corpo humano precisa “deixar” para aceder a memórias antigas que abrangem escalas temporais muito além da vida humana, para se sentir “em casa” quando num estado de fluxo perpétuo? 

  • Seja numa caminhada lenta, num rastejar, numa posição de pé ou em qualquer outra coisa, o que precisa de ser esquecido/lembrado para compreender hapticamente a zona entremarés como mudanças graduais numa escala de dezenas de milhares de anos?

Após 5 dias de residência, as experiências teraõ lugar no primeiro fim de semana de outubro de 2023, na Nazaré e em Salir do Porto – dois locais cuidadosamente selecionados pelas suas propriedades geomorfológicas e estéticas. A Nazaré – uma interface entre a terra como a vemos e a terra subaquática na forma de um grande desfiladeiro subaquático – é o lar de algumas das maiores ondas do mundo, das maiores partículas de areia e de vários fósseis. Salir do Porto é um encontro de inúmeras interfaces: água salgada e água doce de rio, lama de quatro variedades e uma duna, praia e foz do rio. Tendo o tamanho dos grãos de areia como um agente de memória da atividade das ondas, e a distribuição espacial como um traço de memória da evolução geomorfológica da costa, habitamos estes locais num ritual-performance, da maré alta à maré baixa, onde ouvimos, aprendemos, sentimos e recordamos.

Sábado, 7 de outubro: Salir do Porto, 15h-22h
Domingo, 8 de outubro: Praia Norte da Nazaré, 14h-20h

 

Ambas as experiências acontecem na praia e são abertas à participação.

Fique atento ao documentário que acompanhará este projeto, bem como a um artigo conceitual colaborativo sobre o tema das interfaces oceânicas como recursos para recuperar memórias perdidas.

Team Leader:
Anya Yermakova
Anya Yermakova

Composer, sound artist, scholar and performer

Team Members:
Jody Deming
Jody Deming

Professor of Oceanography - University of Washington

Kendall Valentine
Kendall Valentine

Professor of Oceanography - University of Washington

Mónica Pedro
Mónica Pedro

Bio-materials maker, Artisan, Collective dreaming manager

Francisca Siza
Francisca Siza

Filmmaker, Videographer

David Negrão
David Negrão

Multi-media artist

Nora Barna
Nora Barna

Performance artist, Dancer

Rafaela Carvalho
Rafaela Carvalho

Educator,
Edible seaweed researcher

Ivo Teixeira
Ivo Teixeira

Media and performance artist

Mariana Henriques
Mariana Henriques

Fashion Designer

Raquel Pires
Raquel Pires

Fashion Designer

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Invisible Kelp Forest: From Smell to Sound https://oceanmemoryproject.org/invisible-kelp/ Tue, 14 Mar 2023 15:00:47 +0000 http://www.dev.oceanmemoryproject.org/?p=10087

Invisible Kelp Forest: From Smell to Sound

Invisible Kelp Forest: From Smell to Sound

Invisible Kelp Forest: From Smell to Sound is an 8-channel sonic composition that explores the possibility that sound is an ideal medium for translating senses of smell, or chemosensation underwater.It invites the listener to smell the kelp forest with their ears, a mode of synaesthesia.

We explore the ways that sound and smell can both convey intensity, distance, dispersion, texture, and elements of memory that may be specific to particular organisms. We imagine that the olfactory memory of the kelp forest is multiple, linked to what is meaningful for different marine fauna.

We plan to choose 3-6 different marine organisms, and create sonic impressions of their chemosensory experiences of the kelp forest in a scientifically-informed manner. Invisible Kelp Forest plays with invisibility in several ways: by denying the listener any visual cues, they must use their imagination to conjure a spatial sense of the kelp forest on their own.

We invite listeners to pay attention to the way that listening for smell feels in the body, perhaps deterritorializing the sensorium. Our project to translate the underwater smellscape of a kelp forest is a way of evoking a particular kind of archival memory, one that is usually not “for” human beings, who cannot smell while underwater.

Given the fact that the historical range of kelp forests around the world is shrinking (bull kelp forests on the west coast, giant kelp forests in Tasmania), Invisible Kelp Forest gestures to these absences while modeling a unique form of sensory speculation and transductive mediation.

Team Leader:
Melody Jue
Melody Jue

Associate Professor of English at UC Santa Barbara

Team Members:
Anya Yermakova
Anya Yermakova

Composer, sound artist, scholar and performer

Jacob Cram
Jacob Cram

Assistant professor at the University of Maryland

Eli Stein
Eli Stein
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Senses Submerged https://oceanmemoryproject.org/senses-submerged/ Mon, 13 Mar 2023 15:00:47 +0000 http://www.dev.oceanmemoryproject.org/copy-of-copy-of-sensing-the-abyss-immersive-scores-for-interdisciplinary-improvisation/

Senses Submerged

Senses Submerged

The Senses and Sensing workshop asked the OM community to think about senses in the context of ocean memory, but for many of us in the community, our own underwater embodied experience is limited. In our conversations, divers in the community could speak more concretely about their personal understanding of being in the ocean, further informing discussions around how the water shapes or adapts sensory stimuli. Our proposal aims to explore sensory immersion as a step towards developing a deeper understanding of what sensing can mean for ocean organisms and ocean memory. In the three-day sensory exploration and diving workshop in the Mesoamerican Reef, we seek to enrich the collective experience by bringing together a divemaster, a diverse group of OM members, and local Mexican scientists, artists, and community leaders.

Team Leader:
Ray Santisteban
Ray Santisteban

Dive Master

Team Members:
Rebecca Rutstein
Rebecca Rutstein

Multidisciplinary artist

Dana Hemes
Dana Hemes

Interdisciplinary artist

Criss Lee
Criss Lee
Andrew Atkinson
Andrew Atkinson
Daniel Kohn
Daniel Kohn

Visual Artist

Gino Caballero
Gino Caballero

Photographer

Brando Gonzalez
Brando Gonzalez
Patricio Musi
Patricio Musi
Ariadna Blass
Ariadna Blass
Marcela Evia
Marcela Evia
Dani Fuentes
Dani Fuentes
Aysha Carolina
Aysha Carolina
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Unlocking Ocean Memory from Marine Vertebrate Fossil Time Capsules https://oceanmemoryproject.org/unlocking-ocean-memory/ Sun, 12 Mar 2023 15:00:47 +0000 http://www.dev.oceanmemoryproject.org/copy-of-invisible-kelp-forest-from-smell-to-sound/

Unlocking Ocean Memory from Marine Vertebrate Fossil Time Capsules

Unlocking Ocean Memory from Marine Vertebrate Fossil Time Capsules

What if ocean memory from long extinct organisms were still accessible by the traces they left behind? What if we can access ancient ocean memory by experiencing it through the senses of marine animals who no longer swim the seas? What did these individual marine animals sense over their lifetime?

This project seeks to analyze and utilize fossilized sense organs to unlock long hidden ocean memories and expand our human concepts of senses and sensing beyond the terrestrial anthropocene. The approach combines research methods from geology, biology, and paleontology, with artistic practices from painting and music, with technological approaches from data logging and modeling, all merged with science communication.

Team Leader:
Yinan Wang
Yinan Wang
Team Members:
Michelle Banks
Michelle Banks
Insley Haciski
Insley Haciski
Heather Spence
Heather Spence

Marine and Science Advisor, Water Power Technologies Office, U.S. Department of Energy

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Sensing the Abyss: Immersive Scores for Interdisciplinary Improvisation https://oceanmemoryproject.org/sensing-the-abyss/ Sun, 12 Mar 2023 15:00:47 +0000 http://www.dev.oceanmemoryproject.org/copy-of-invisible-kelp-forest-from-smell-to-sound-2/

Sensing the Abyss: Immersive Scores for Interdisciplinary Improvisation

Sensing the Abyss: Immersive Scores for Interdisciplinary Improvisation

This project is a multi-stage experimentation with ocean memory, featuring an interdisciplinary residency and performance as the primary creative research space and point of departure. Rajna Swaminathan’s Mangal ensemble gathers improvising musicians alongside visual and movement artists to experiment with the concept of a “score”– whether it resides on the page, in the body and senses, or in an underlying relationship to the environment. Oceanic modes of understanding sound and movement are deeply relevant to this inquiry, leading us to ask: how can the score move beyond inscription-based intelligibility and embody the opacities of immersion, absorption, and dissipation? The preliminary residency and performance offer an opportunity to share materials, find sense-bending prompts, and improvise together.

Building from this momentum, offshoot “scores” and research questions are invited to take shape, led by the team members in conversation with a broader community network (local, institutional, and beyond). Sensing the Abyss unfolds through (1) the documentation of a one-week residency/performance by Mangal at Seattle’s Chapel Performance Space, followed by (2) a visit to UC Santa Barbara, where collaborators will meet and discuss further experimental possibilities, culminating in (3) a virtual meeting and open feedback session to compile ideas for independent and collaborative research/creation. Through the multiple phases of this project, we hope to offer a fruitful sounding board for future-oriented projects that combine artistic, humanistic, and scientific modes of inquiry to transform how we sense and relate to ocean memory and the climate crisis.

Team Leader:
Rajna Swaminathann
Rajna Swaminathann
Team Members:
Anya Yermakova
Anya Yermakova

Composer, sound artist, scholar and performer

Jody Deming
Jody Deming
Melody Jue
Melody Jue

Associate Professor of English at UC Santa Barbara

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To become an ocean https://oceanmemoryproject.org/become-an-ocean/ Sun, 12 Mar 2023 15:00:47 +0000 http://www.dev.oceanmemoryproject.org/copy-of-sensing-the-abyss-immersive-scores-for-interdisciplinary-improvisation/

To Become an Ocean

To become an ocean

To Become the Ocean is an ambitious project on ideas relating to critical sustainability across platforms for significant opportunities with a team of collaborators of exceptional proficiency in their respective fields. It presents a potentially career-defining chance for my practice to communicate the importance of sensing the ocean as a source of novel scientific exploration internationally, as well as exploring the concept of how art can be used as a force for social change.

Author:
Siobhan McDonald
Siobhan McDonald

Visual Artist

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A Multisensorial Collaboratorium for Transcoding and Interacting with the Ocean Memory Datascape https://oceanmemoryproject.org/transcoding-ocean-memory/ Sun, 12 Mar 2023 15:00:47 +0000 http://www.dev.oceanmemoryproject.org/copy-of-senses-submerged/

A Multisensorial Collaboratorium for Transcoding and Interacting with the Ocean Memory Datascape

A Multisensorial Collaboratorium for Transcoding and Interacting with the Ocean Memory Datascape

“A Multisensorial Collaboratorium for Transcoding and Interacting with the Ocean Memory Datascape” is an art-science investigation whose objectives and activities will be focused to develop/implement an ocean memory multisensory collaboratorium (OMMCoLab) prototype among investigators from University of Denver’s Emergent Digital Practices (EDP) program and the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute (MBARI). The intended objective of the OMMCoLab Project is to realize a virtual-space prototype to collaboratively explore, record and recombine the multisensorial, spatial and temporal datascape into the emerging narratives of the ocean memory paradigm.

Team Leader:
Timothy Weaver
Timothy Weaver
Team Members:
Nathan Truelove
Nathan Truelove
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