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A
Large Slow River has a beautiful site. It is set on Lake Ontario,
with the waves hitting the rocks all day. Water was a major element
in this walk. While working on the script, I was writing a fictional
account of a man slipping at the top of a waterfall and falling to
his death. I decided one Sunday while working on it that I needed
to go to record the sound effects for the waterfall so we drove for
over an hour to Waterton National Park in Alberta, just north of
the Montana border. When we got to the small town where the waterfall
was located, we decided to have lunch. Just as we were finishing
lunch, I said to George that we had to get going, he had to hurry
up. I was really impatient and intense. So we left the restaurant
in a hurry and drove the two blocks to the waterfall. Just as we
arrived at the site, 3 young people were walking slowly across the
top of the 40-meter waterfall on a log that had become lodged above
it. Everyone was watching this scene and thinking that the kids were
crazy. It was a very dangerous thing to do. They all got across safely
and the audience at the bottom was shaking their heads at the craziness
of youth. I started to set up my recording gear in the van. As I
was doing this, one kid who was still up above realized that he had
made an impression on the audience below so he started dancing on
the rocks at the top of the falls. Just as I was all set up and pressed
the button to record I heard screams and yelling. I turned around
to see that the boy had slipped off the rock and plunged the forty
meters to the bottom. One of the strangest things is the way George
looked at me at that moment and said ‘how did you know ?’ as
if I had caused it. It took two teams of mountain climbers 3 days
to get the boy’s body out from between the rocks where it had
become stuck. No one had fallen or died at this waterfall
since the late ’60s. I still wonder why it happened at that
moment. I have a recording sitting on a shelf in my studio of the
boy’s girlfriend crying, screaming crowds, men yelling instructions
about getting ropes, and the sound of the sirens with the ambulance
arriving. The crash of the waterfall is behind all of this like white
noise. I never did use that part of the script or any of the recordings
from that day.
sound of empty house, Janet saying ‘hello,
hello’
Janet I wander through the
house, looking in room after room. All there is is emptiness, plaster
on the floor, broken windows.
Janet Hello. close
up
George on
voice recorder I hear her calling but I can’t
seem to make a sound. Time moves around me like a large slow river.
sound of machine clicks
Janet It didn’t work.
We’re back in the gallery. I have to try it again. Turn around,
let’s go outside.
sound of crickets
Man VR It’s night.
I’m walking by the pond. There’s a light
on in the attic of the house. I can see it reflected in the water.
Walk between the fenced area and the metal structure.
Janet Walk between the fenced
area and the metal structure. The sun is coming out. Seagulls are perched
on the walls.
Janet I’m going to sit
down for a minute on the middle bench to the left. You can smell the
lake now, that smell of fish and algae. Sit down.
Janet I’m at a beach
on Lake Huron, my toes squishing into the mud, feeling them disappear
deeper as each wave washes over them, jumping off my father’s
wet shoulders into the water. Now I’m at another beach, it’s
night, the sound of the waves coming in through the screen windows.
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In
2000, Oakville Galleries commissioned Janet Cardiff to create an audio
walk in Gairloch Gardens in Oakville, Canada. The walk, now a part
of our permanent collection, takes place on an 11-acre estate on the
edge of Lake Ontario. This idyllic park setting includes Gairloch Gallery,
a rose garden, a couple of ponds – one with a wooden bridge – a
swan pen, a sculpture garden, a teahouse, and stone breakwater along
the waterfront. Geese, swans, ducks, children, dogs, seniors, tourists,
and bridal parties are common sights.
The route begins in the gallery.
Janet’s voice in the headset resounds: “Hello, hello [...]
all there is is emptiness, plaster on the floor, broken windows ... ” We
hear her thoughts as we are led out of the creaking gallery doors into
the garden, and they become intermingled with a man’s tape-recorded
voice recalling a wartime era. It is in this interchange that we find
Janet circling around some of the same themes as in her previous walks – memories,
displacement, and desire. Like a Beckett novel, her scripts have trouble
with resolutions. Disconnected thoughts, sounds, conversations, and
events are strung together in a sequence that suggests mystery; a world
not empty of meaning, but, perhaps, too full of it. Sometimes we listen
with great tenderness to the internal and external conversations of
the two principal characters (Janet’s own voice and that of a man)
and then are temporally dislocated again. Gairloch Gardens oscillates
from being a gentle park to being a place that has the potential for
tragedy. So, too, she frames analogies, overlaps subtexts, and employs
multiple sounds: an organ grinder, opera singers, children’s voices,
sirens, geese, buzzing flies, flying bullets, and helicopters. Often
her characters leave their words hanging – weightless and somber,
full of density and gravity. Janet, in effect, has created a virtual
space anchored in reality.
Janet
overlays her observations of time with the time we experience performing
the audio walk. For example, in the CD she recalls a previous visit
to the gardens and we hear her say, “[…] there were petunias
and marigolds. Now it is just overturned dirt.” What we may in fact
be seeing and experiencing at this juncture are daffodils, and, quite
possibly, as the season unfolds, petunias and marigolds, and then perhaps
dirt. We are made acutely aware of the transformative processes of
real time.
The fluidity between the imaginary and the real finds
a visual counterpart in the ebb and flow of water sounds and the artist’s
unremitting reference to aqueous things: a beach, pond, creek, lake,
mist, and rain. The flow of water – Janet’s spoken references
and the actual sound of it – is used as a metaphor throughout and
also assists in directing us to free-floating thoughts. The sound of
waves seems to wash through us and act as a trigger for memory. Janet
shares a few of her own – as we simultaneously hear the in-and-out
lulling of waves – which may or may not be in synch with the waves
we actually see. In turn, we intervene with our own memories, which
can lead to reflection or even reinvention. The watery imagery is just
another example of how Janet prompts acts of imagination that return
to us the ability to identify and creatively associate.3
Marnie Fleming
3 The above text is excerpted from Marnie Fleming’s
catalog essay, A Large Slow River, and appears here courtesy of Oakville
Galleries. |
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| WALK EXCERPTS |
| ***The tracks must be listened with headphones for the full
3-D effect*** |
| Excerpt #1 |
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JANET CARDIFF
Audio walk, 38 minutes
Curated by Marnie Fleming at Gairloch Gardens, Oakville Galleries. Ontario, Canada |
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