can we "represent" the non-living; the animal, the spiritual, the always present but perhaps the unseen?
how may the non-human be re-presented or presented (made visible) to (a) public(s)?
Mapping the movements of the non-human directs the reader of these documents to orient themselves to and alongside paths otherwise confusing, foreign and unfamiliar the to human eye, designated paths and understandings of place.
Even minor shifts in the ground beneath us deteriorates, shifts and changes the paths of designations, the wild and the artificial.
mapping is a time based medium. Can we unfix time from the geographies of mapping? Can we create guides for a place that acknowledges the movement of the map's users as much as it acknowledges the movement of the land in which it represents?