Clara Thesis Outline & Proposal"

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BODIES OF WATER; PROJECT PROPOSAL

“Bodies of Water” is a ritualistic performance film which draws attention to the extraction of clay and the reclaiming of the landscape by natural forces.

5 Performers congregate around, and interact with ceramic instruments created by the artist, in an extraction lake; a lake which is a remnant of an exploited clay pit, that has been re-cultivated.

The instruments, similar to instruments present throughout the makers childhood, partially imitate birds and underline a song written in collaboration with the musician Mila Meijer. The song focusses on the motherly personification of nature as an entity, returning to the destroyed site.

Clara Franke has been working around the topics of community, ecofeminism, mythology and the deepening of our relationship with nature through understanding industrial production processes and their effects, and in contrast learn traditional crafts and raise appreciation for organic materials and slow, mindful production.

For “Bodies of Water”, the artist has choreographed a performance, celebrating the symbiosis we as humans share with more-than-human entities, especially when taking part in acts of re-cultivation.

It is a visualisation of hopeful future thinking, in alignment with the ideas of the solar punk movement. A literary and artistic movement focusing on utopias.


Body of water

fill the abyss

Fill the void

of what’s left behind.

Mother loads exhausted

but mothers returning.


BODIES OF WATER; THESIS DRAFT

The following collection of short stories reacts to the making of the film as they document memories and ideas in relation to the themes clay, water/lakes, music and the act of congregating; Seeking for moments of connection between humans and more-than-human entities.


They mostly feed of personal memories, yet partially move towards solar punk/ speculative fiction inspired by mythological means of storytelling. (These rather speculative stories I am still working on, talking from the perspective of natural elements or depicting conversations between nature and human. The ones shows here are mostly autobiographical)

Bodies of Water

Our bodies of water

jump into

a body of water

turns into

bodies of water

jump into

a body of water.

Red Brick House

She grew up in a suburbia shaped from red brick houses hosting 2 perfectly normed, nuclear family constellations at a time.

She moved into a red brick house hosting 250 humans challenging these norms.

She moved into a red brick house with two other artists, tedious mice, pigeons that would release themselves in her room when the door would be left open and moths nibbling on her French berets.

She despises the color red more than anyone she ever met.

Lehels House

A picturesque drive on a warm, late June day amongst the softly green, hilly landscape of the Hungarian countryside. On the back seat Azul, one of the three dogs in the silver Toyota is napping, his head rested on one of the three humans labs. He is napping too. Amber is driving. I am on the passenger seat. The atmosphere of this place, combined with our sisterly dynamic and flowy skirts remind me of Grimms fairytale Snow-White and Rose-Red. The story of two sisters living with their mother, spending their days pruning red and white roses.

A turn onto a sandy driveway brings us to a beautiful, white, cob house. The grass is high and the building overgrown by vine branches. The garden is a jungle from almond trees, nettles and tomato plants. Lehel, the old man who build the house himself with only 2 helpers, had been off the radar for a while now. People at the local market have been asking Amber about him, as he has not been selling his glasses of wheatgrass pulp, Manarax he calls it, over there for weeks by now. She doesn't know where he has been.

What she does know, is the code to his number lock and they let themselves in. At first sight the house seamed a little small, but when entering one is greeted with an open loft, all white and soft edged walls. Around 9pm they dip their naked bodies into the endless, turquoise lake Balaton, just a few minutes drive away. The rest of the night they spend inside the house from clay and straw, high, dancing on the various levels and on top of the huge clay oven in the center of it, singing, playing the guitar, wondering where the creator of this place could possibly be.

The next day they pack up and sneakily leave the house behind, lock locked again as if they had never been here.

Imm003 5A.jpg



Geophagia

At 10:36 on a Tuesday morning I get a text from Felix.

“Hi girl

Wanna be crazy and go to Kyrgyzstan with me?

Found flights for 70€”

"When?" "How?"

“In March.

Look up it’s far as fuck”

At 1:25pm the flights are booked. This is happening.

We start researching what we actually just signed up for. The “Switzerland of Asia” seems to be a beautifully mountainous country, far from what we know, far in general. 5000km far with a time difference of 5 hours. Rich in cultural heritage connected to shamanism and traditional crafts such as carpet felting. Definitely the most random decision we have made in a while. I don’t think I have ever even talked to anyone from Kyrgyzstan.

One day later I get another text from Felix.

“Yooo

Dune wants to come!

Omg they booked”

Another day passes and I find a new group chat in my chat history.

One more person, Paula, signed up for the unusual endeavor. I have never met her before. Curious. Very curious. About all of it.

Ever heard of geophagia? It's a term describing the practice of eating soil, such as clay.

So it turns out to be a common practice that people in Kyrgyzstan eat clay. Yepp. Eat it. Chunks of it. Just like that. I find images of market stands in Bishkek with varieties of gray, yellow and blueish clay bits, ready to be munched. I find a website called museumofedible.earth where the blue clay is described as following:

“One of the most delicious clays. It has a beautiful light gray color with yellow streaks on the surface of the piece. The clay is dense and homogeneous in structure. It bites off with a crunch, breaks down into plates and melts into a delicate creamy mass, practically without sticking. At the very beginning, there is a subtle sweetish aftertaste. This clay has a very rich clay taste. Nourishing.”

“They eat clay.”

Felix repeats several times over bottles of wine at his place a few days later.

“They EAT clay!”

Two Solar Punks

We are standing close to the check-in of the boulder gym with its view onto a depressing looking canal, on yet another gray, rainy day in this puddle of a town. My friend looks down on his phone, yet internally prepared to scramble up and down walls for hours. An odd sport attracting those that stuck in cities that kept their inner child alive and would most likely climb up and down trees and rocks if immersed in nature.

We grew up together in suburban Hamburg and decided to study in this small student town in the Netherlands, 3 1/2 hours West from home.

We are waiting for someone he has recently met. He will join us today. A blond man, boy,  in his early twenties, enters. He's wearing a snug fitting brown leather jacket with a fur collar. There is something arrogant about him. He smiles and my judgment immediately evaporates. I nervously drop my cards on the floor next to the counter. He helps me pick them up and we introduce ourselves.

He’s a good hugger.

Odd to think that a year of friendship later, these two will spend 3 years of their lives in a relationship with each other.

Odd to think about, now that we are not anymore.

We were quite the cliche hippie-esque couple. Long haired blondies. Idealists. Intensive travelers. Our relationship opening and closing. Vegetarian. And to top the hippie cliches- from white privileged households. I sometimes wonder if in this world our level of idealism has become a privilege too. But the contradictions were strong between our lifestyle and our values. We preached about sustainability as we flew to visit the Burning Man Festival in the middle of the South African desert.

The solutions to almost all global issues seemed oh-so-obvious to us; universal basic income, community housing, local produce…

He switched between utopian excitement- in which a group of us buy a small patch of land and live in the Italian mountains and live in a community; we would fantasise about building a cob house, grow micro-greens and mushrooms - and a dystopian anxiety, fearing that patriarchal capitalism would win after all and continue destroying nature and grow social devisions around us. I wonder if he'll ever get that little farm.

I wonder if he will ever have that little farm.


We unspokenly agreed to imagine a future in which nature, humans and technology coexist in symbiosis. A string of hope to hold onto and steadily feed to gain the strength to actually inspire change instead of being overthrown by the waves of depressing news stories all around us. He subscribed to a newsletter on positive news called Upside by the Guardian.

I began centring my art around the topics of community, ecofeminism, mythology and the deepening of humans relationship with nature through understanding industrial production processes and their effects, and in contrast learn traditional crafts and raise appreciation for organic materials and slow, mindful production.

I naively try to keep the disease-esque pessimism that seams to be spreading globally out of the walls of my heart. I am a solar punk at heart.


We were solar punks at heart and I hope we always will be, even when apart.



A confusing swimming lesson, with winds between 0 and 100mph and occasional water up the nose

I bathe in the resonating sound of his deep voice, unable to think clearly or respond.

I bathe in melodies, intoxicated and surrounded by alienated, yet oddly connected bodies.

I bathe my naked body in an icy stream, who directly made its way from the mountains, stopping my breath for a second.

I bathe in the giggles shared with friends, allowing each other to make increasingly inappropriate jokes throughout the evening.

I bathe in your hug, wanting to request another one as soon as we let go of the embrace.

Go with the waves of your emotions, my therapist said.

Isn't life sometimes like a first surf lesson, in which salt water keeps going up your nose, in this weirdly gross and painful, yet oddly satisfying way?


Clay head

Immersing my hands in the soft body of soil, I forget about the concept of time until my back painfully reminds me of the duration of my doing.

I intuitively stroke the material until the desired smoothness of the surface is achieved. An extension of my own body and mind, each object recognisable as my hands’ collaboration with the organic matter.

I started working with clay during the last year of my undergraduate degree at an art academy in the north of the Netherlands. Making and failing plenty, my usually impatient self would be pinned to the ceramics studio for many hours at a time.

The small room almost hidden behind the cantine hadn't really caught my attention in the 3 years leading up to this point, possibly due to the dislike of the oddly unmotivated workshop instructor.

I went on to take a turntable course in Barcelona, impatiently waiting until I could go back to my class in Gràcia, a lively neighborhood towards the mountains. The class was led by the calm handed, attractive, tattooed teacher Antonio. It started by watching him in the almost sensual act of centering a 500 gram piece of clay, a slurping soundscape while continuously changing the shape from a phallic tower to a flat blob.

“Un poco más!” Would be one of his typical comments in the next step of the process; trimming. Tapping on the shape I was working on, he was listening to the sound of the hollow body. Once the sound became drum-like, hollow, it was time to stop cutting down and leave the little creation to dry and wait for its next step.

Baking, glazing, baking, and after 4 weeks in total I would finally hold my first own cups. Oh, the pride.  Every piece but one would be gifted to family members for Christmas a month later, every excited reaction feeding my confidence and wanting to continue making aimlessly.

The one I didnt give away from that first initial batch, my favorite, was a cup accidentally sliding down the wheel, twirled around and dented. A beautifully accidental, asymmetrical mistake.

Glaze stuck to the kiln, 20 mouldy, non-waterproof cups, completely melted pieces and many more mistakes would follow.

I arrogantly seem to hardly want to use a mass produced vessel of any kind anymore, knowing the bliss I feel when holding one made with my, my friends or my sisters hands.

It lures me in, the workshop. I wonder if I am just productively procrastinating.


Mermaids

They hadn't been together for a few months now, but couldn't fully let go of what they lost yet, with a slight hope and confusion that it might not actually be over yet.

So they plan a night on the beach on a late summer evening, stopping at a gas station to buy wood for a fire.

He has the tendency to misjudge directions and distances and trying to not fall back into her unfair patterns of bickering she retains her joking tone while they accidentally walk in circles with their heavy bags through a small forest to the dunes.

It took longer than he would have thought to start the fire too, but eventually the ripped out pages of her notebook ignite the thick pieces of wood.

The fire still burning they run into the cold sea, luminescent algae glowing up shyly around them. “It was so much stronger two days ago”, he says.

She takes another slow dive through the little sparks of light and starts whirling her hand around the water, almost as if trying to whip it like egg white for a meringue.

They spend the rest of the evening side by side by the fire, eating risotto he cooked the day before and exchanging music they have been listening to since they broke up.

It starts to rain, so they decide to go home instead of sleeping in the dunes, as they had planned at first.

When they come home she grabs the guitar, and starts singing along to her fingers moving the strings. “I love when you sing”, he says, rolled up on the couch next to her.


Bibliography

Kimmerer, Robin. Braiding Sweetgrass. Milkweed Editions, 2015.

In the intersection between science and indigenous knowledge, Kimmerer shares personal experiences and revelations, teaching a new appreciation towards nature's gifts. Especially her ideas of “honorable harvesting methods” were very intriguing to me.


Coelho, Paulo. Hippie. Hamish Hamilton, 2018.

Generally one of my favorite authors, Coelho’s book Hippies is his most autobiographical one so far. It tells about him and his lover Karla’s journey to Nepal in a bus from Dam Square, Amsterdam. A book that speaks of journeys, young love and the values and lifestyle related to the term hippie.

I also see the writing style of this book as something I can draw inspiration from for my thesis.


Tolle, Eckhart. The Power of Now: A Guide to Spiritual Enlightenment. Namaste Publishing, 1997.

Stepping away from a mind centered definition of self, Tolle’ teaching of mindfulness focus on, well, being present in the now, while consciously choosing when to think in future and past terms. He addresses the mind and it’s “tricks”, with which it distracts us from being present.


Hesse, Hermann. Siddhartha S. Fischer Verlag, 1922.

Hesse describes the spiritual journey of the young Siddhartha. Initially seeing strength in the ability to fast and live an ascetic life, the young man embarks on a journey that confronts him with many challenges, makes him dive into the world of materialism, which he sees as a game and turns away from.

Finally he finds wisdom and calm in a river. Here he becomes a ferryman, known for his enlightened being.


Ende, Michael. Momo. Thienemann Verlag, 1973.

A book that my father read to me when I was a child and that my dance school reenacted on stage. Only now I fully understand the value of it. Momo is an orphan child living in an abandoned theater. Her character strikes with strong listening skills and her humble nature.

“Gray men” enter the small town that she lives in and start stealing people's time, it becomes a new currency that has to be saved and put in a savings account.

Visualizing a human's time in so-called hour-lilies, the book gives a poetically rich analysis of how humans do not value time, which is not spent “productively”.

Artistic References

Ragnar Kjartansson - Death is Elsewhere

A film installation in which two sets of twins move around screens set up in a circle, singing a song called Death is Elsewhere for 77 minutes at summer solstice.

"I keep thinking of Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream and these magical nights of love. We're having a lovely time in nature; the horror of the world seems elsewhere. But midsummer is also a reminder of death, or darkness. That's the psyche of the Arctic regions. It's getting brighter and brighter, but the light is already starting to fade into blessed darkness."-Ragnar Kjartansson

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RgdqSGBjTRk

Mel Arsenault - Altars

The Canadian artist Mel Arsenault is also playing on the intersection of science and spirituality, often creating altars and embracing her collaboration with the elements, the pigments in her work, interacting with the fire to become something out of her control.

https://melarsenault.com/Le-Jardin-des-AstrocytesII


Vica Pacheco

Ceramic instruments and installations

https://peana.co/artists/75-vica-pacheco/overview/