Exposition

The Invisible Inside the Visible (2014)

Sheilah Wilson

About this exposition

The Invisible Inside the Visible was a personal quest turned art project to locate physical evidence of a century-old racetrack on the Cape John peninsula in the village of River John, Nova Scotia. The journey to find the racetrack was marked by its double invisibility. Not only was it remembered without specificity in regard to location, it was also invisible to the observing eye because it was embedded into the landscape. This exposition is a reflection on the nature of landscape as a marker of cultural geography, and on my ability as an artist to pull the past forward through performance. I see the performative gesture as a physical articulation akin to a vibration; it disrupts the stability of the narrative. This project adds to the discourse investigating maps, memory, rural community, oral history, depictions of landscape, performance as tool, and the potential for dialectical articulations of place and history.
typeresearch exposition
date01/01/2014
published26/05/2014
last modified26/05/2014
statuspublished
share statusprivate
affiliationindependent, w(here) festival
licenseAll rights reserved
urlhttps://www.researchcatalogue.net/view/31415/31458
doihttps://doi.org/10.22501/jar.31415
published inJournal for Artistic Research
portal issue5.


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61623 margaretmap14 margaret All rights reserved
61622 map714 donnie langille All rights reserved
61621 map714 donnie All rights reserved
61620 willis14 willis langille All rights reserved
61617 deliverypapers sheilah wilson All rights reserved
61613 bestguessmap river john library All rights reserved
61610 TilteBarTEMP 2014 All rights reserved
61600 FootnsTEMP 2014 All rights reserved
61592 map6 margaret maclean All rights reserved
61591 map7 donnie langille All rights reserved
61590 map714 donnie langille All rights reserved
61589 willis14 willis langille All rights reserved
61418 NewspaperPDF 2014 All rights reserved
61414 pdficon_large 2014 All rights reserved
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61373 sellers14 2014 All rights reserved
61372 ross14 2014 All rights reserved
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61370 margaretmap14 2014 All rights reserved
61366 map714 2014 All rights reserved
61365 jimb14 2014 All rights reserved
61364 foots 2014 All rights reserved
61358 blank 2014 All rights reserved
61341 NewTextTemp 2014 All rights reserved
61328 capejohnhorse1 advocate paper 1921 All rights reserved
61185 newspaper sheilah wilson All rights reserved
50316 mappage Sheilah Wilson 2013 All rights reserved
50239 Arrows Sheilah Wilson 2013 All rights reserved
50234 audioWillis Sheilah Wilson 2013 All rights reserved
50231 audioSusanSellers Sheilah Wilson 2013 All rights reserved
50229 audioMildred Sheilah Wilson 2013 All rights reserved
50227 audioMargaret Sheilah Wilson 2013 All rights reserved
50225 audioJimBaillieElder Sheilah Wilson 2013 All rights reserved
50222 audioDonnLangille Sheilah Wilson 2013 All rights reserved
50202 audioAlbert Sheilah Wilson 2013 All rights reserved
50190 test8 2013 Andrew Kirkpatrick All rights reserved
50041 videostill Sheilah Wilson 2012 All rights reserved
49991 test7 2013 Andrew Kirkpatrick All rights reserved
49933 aerialview Sheilah Wilson 2012 All rights reserved
49454 donnlangille sheilah wilson All rights reserved
49453 margaret sheilah wilson All rights reserved
49452 albert sheilah wilson All rights reserved
49451 jimbaillieelder sheilah wilson All rights reserved
49450 mildred sheilah wilson All rights reserved
49449 susansellers sheilah wilson All rights reserved
49448 willis sheilah wilson All rights reserved
49447 willis sheilah wilson All rights reserved
49436 donnie langille map sheilah wilson All rights reserved
49435 susansellersmap sheilah wilson All rights reserved
49434 albertmap sheilah wilson All rights reserved
49433 jimmieeldermap sheilah wilson All rights reserved
49432 margaretmap sheilah wilson All rights reserved
49431 mildredmap sheilah wilson All rights reserved
49430 willismap sheilah wilson All rights reserved
43608 video of field sheilah wilson All rights reserved
42409 page in newspaper sheilah wilson All rights reserved
42328 mapscompiledweb sheilah wilson All rights reserved
42229 person listening sheilah wilson All rights reserved
42227 cover the invisible inside the visible sheilah wilson All rights reserved
42224 install sheilah wilson All rights reserved
42222 the visible invisible sheilah wilson All rights reserved
31451 invisiblevisible sheilah wilson All rights reserved
31444 audio invisible sheilah wilson All rights reserved

comments: 1 (last entry by Sharon Kivland - 26/05/2014 at 14:32)
Sharon Kivland 26/05/2014 at 14:32

A thorough and well-conceived project that is articulate and convincing, raising relevant questions about memory and place, and challenging preconceived ideas about experience and location in relation to language.  The published version of the project performs with a neat simplicity and directness. There is a quiet and purposeful poetic structure that underpins a text that takes this reader on a journey through the ideas and the places of memory in relation to a specific site. The reader/viewer is led through a landscape on screen, and also may actively engage with moments of encounter or interpretation. The artist has staked out a territory for enquiry with well-supported work that is insightful, speculative, and compelling, using a shift in register and pace throughout, nicely balanced. The essay is presented with care and the images function to support and move the argument, as more than merely illustrative figures. The project and its exposition has been approached thoughtfully with the use of first-hand testimony and newspaper report, providing not only a sensitive means of engaging with the subject, but also a persuasive primary source of social and anthropological research, which has allowed the examination and support of what is proposed from a (small) range of personal perspectives and experiences. There is a good understanding of the critical context of the subject and the bibliography indicates substantial research, while the project itself constitutes research.

A clear proposal of the question is delivered, traced/explored through various means, shoring up the investigation into the relation of place to memory, and finally, to language. The project functions as an example of primary research, from which a number of insights are drawn. It is grounded in empirical research and primary practice, and is both consistent and convincing. The design of the maps is engaging, and works well, relating the sketches to voice. The maps, as drawing and entry points to oral/aural histories, work effectively and with affect. This is a careful and direct approach to a thoughtful study.

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