we are working

Satyam Mistry / Olive Wei / Auden Tura / Ella Spitzer-Stephan

Introduction 




    Are we ever really lost? At what point does unknowing become the start of new knowledge? To research is to investigate in order to find a conclusion; however, that is rarely the case. Rather, we think of knowledge as a hole, that sucks you in deeper, and deeper. In this sense, we can begin to think about learning as continuous and forever changing.

   The beginning of this research project was initiated long before the foundation of this site. At the start of the year, we all began separate projects attempting to produce artistic research on Rouge Park for a class on public art. Later, we returned to this rouge project as researchers attempting to compile information for the continuation of this public art initiative.

    As four individuals with little experience of this park, these two beginnings have shaped our understanding of our own research and the park itself. What we found the most interesting was the ability to navigate this seemingly unnavigatable landscape through our curiosity and incomprehension. While exploring the tails, our most fruitful moments came from veering off trail and capacity for finding interest in chance encounters with the park.

   We are working offers a look into Rouge Park’s dynamics, showcasing how data is spread, collected, synthesized, and disseminated. This database is built on reflecting ecological models of dissemination, as we started to find likeness in pollination or mushroom sporing and the act of doing research. As we invite you to probe the site you may find it easy to get lost in the artistic research and fall down rabbit holes, or in this case, wander off-trail. Through the convergence of all these thoughts and ideas, we continue to explore, learn, and contribute to this ongoing dialogue.


Start Exploring





-this document is to inspire thinking around the Rouge National Urban Park
-this is a working document
-this document contains research about the park that doesn’t really seem like it is about the park
-we hope that our individual references can launch your own thoughts around public art
-information within this document may break, expire, or change 
-you may find yourself going in circles, but we hope that you are actually weaving a web
-this document is a resource organized and disorganized by filters located at the top of the page, divided into source type and categories, some entries contain notes, some contain
note on notes, and some simply are there for personal exploration.  
-Like the sources themselves, the categories vs. Source Types are subjective, and categorized by our own system of organization. By witnessing our destinations, it becomes clear that the process of categorizing is not a “rational” or “logical” practice but one born out of biases, here we use this arbitrariness to our advantage - demonstrating the possibilities for making up new fields of research, source types, etc. as well as highlighting the many ways in which our research overlaps.
-join us and add your thoughts, questions, comments, ideas, etc. to this working document





Why Look At Animals?
Eliot Haworth
https://www.instagram.com/whylookatanimals/
Notes

 













Satyam. M
Category
(non-human+ habitat)
(architecture)
(landscape)

Source Type
(social media) (image)




Dutch Landscape
José Quintanar
https://www.florenceloewy.com/gallery/exhibitions/dutch-landscapes/















Satyam.  M
Category
(non-human + habitat)(landscape) 

Source Type
(exhibition) (image) 



Seasonal Neighbours https://seasonalneighbours.com/Trajectories











Satyam. M
Category
(non-human + habitat)
(artists)

Source Type
(image)
(text)
(book)


Seeds at the table


Seasonal Matters Rural Relations 
Fieldnotes on rythms, rituals and cohabitation
Sacred Fire Pot


Folly- Dove Tails
https://follyarch.info/Dove-Tales












Satyam. M
Category
(non-human + habitat)
(artists)

Source Type
(image)
(exhibition)
(architecture)

exhibition view
   
exhibition view


Why Look At Animals
John Bergerhttps://app.milanote.com/e/1SG9eL1eh8fne9?p=ebwdrOOKhI0

















Satyam. M
Category
(non-human + habitat)
(theory)

Source Type
(book)
 (text)




Blind Men Vibeke Mascini
https://vibekemascini.com/Blind-Men













Satyam. M
Category
(non-human + habitat) 
Source Type
(video)
(exhibition)






23 skidoo: On finding “ways out” at the crossroads of artistic research and care
Henk Slagerhttps://www.e-flux.com/education/features/611462/23-skidoo-on-finding-ways-out-at-the-crossroads-of-artistic-research-and-care

Notes














Satyam .M + Olive. W 
Category
(non-human + habitat)
(theory) 
(artist)

Source Type
(text)
(video)  



Tolin Alexander, Lonnie van Brummelen, and Siebren de Haan, Stones Have Laws (still), 2018. Participatory film project in conjunction with Saamaka and Okanisi Maroon communities in Suriname.





The Sea in the ForestElla Finer
https://content.blackwoodgallery.ca/media/pages/publications/living-with-concepts-publication/00044e8080-1666726968/blackwood_lwc_micropublication.pdf

















Satyam. M
Category
(non-human + habitat) 
(artists) 

Source Type
(text)
(.pdf)