Spectres, Landings / Spectres in Change Retreat on Seili / 14-17 May 2019 /
Hosts. Taru Elfving, Contemporary Art Archipelago (CAA), Ilppo Vuorinen, Jari Hänninen, Katja Mäkinen, Jasmin Inkinen, (The Archipelago Research Institute)
Guests. Maja Kuzmanovic and Nik Gaffney (FoAM), Helena Hunter and Mark Peter Wright (Matterlurgy), Kati Roover, and Saara Hannula with a brief visit from Katja Bonnevier (Archipelago Sea Biosphere reserve)
(see spectres residency 02019 for further notes…)
Travel to Seili. Train form Helsinki to Turku, Bus fro Turku to Nauvo, Ferry from Nauvo to Seili.
Walk and introduction to the retreat by Taru Elving and Introduction to Seili by Ilppo Vuorinen. The institutional history of the island (leper colony, mental hospital, research institute), environmental situation on the island and the Archipelago sea (rising temperature, lowered salinity, increase of tick populations…). visit former hospital now institute building, church and cemetery
Walk + introductions to Seili research by Jasmin Inkinen & Johannes Sahisten. MA research Diet of Mystis relicta group in the Archipelago Sea & metabarcoding, BA research on herring parasites, tick collection, microscopy (herring otoliths, ticks, plankton, primula veris (cowslip))
Archipelago Sea Biosphere Reserve / Katja Bonnevier. Explanation of the Archipelago (inner, middle and outer, thousands of islands of differing sizes, habitats and populations). Introduction to the Archipelago Sea Biosphere Reserve (criteria, partners, ambassadors, activities). Examples of projects (meadows & grazing, single-use plastic campaign and exhibition, food waste, education…) http://www.unesco.org/mabdb/br/brdir/directory/biores.asp?code=FIN+02&mode=all
Presentations of recent work by participants
Dinner, Plankton collection, walks, Sauna and supper
Presentations of Seili research by Jasmin Inkinen. meadows and vascular plants time series, tick hotspot.
Field trip with Jari Hänninen & Katja Mäkinen. collection and identification of coastal species (fish, moluscs, crustaceans, seaweed…) plankton collection
Research presentation by Katja Mäkinen. herring/zooplankton time series, research methodologies and conclusions. https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/Publication/35435072?lang=fi_FI
Dinner, Microscopy with live plankton samples, Wine & cheese at Mattson, hosted by Jari Hänninen.
video screening of Distortions, a work in progress by Kati Roover about underwater noise pollution in the Baltic Sea: https://helsinki.setac.org/event/science-art-exhibition/
brief overview of FoAM's history, current practice and open questions for the residency on Seili. FoAM Network http://fo.am/about/ FoAM Earth https://fo.am/studios/earth/ and https://fo.am/events/spectres-salon/
Landing with Saara Hannula (http://www.saarahannula.com/). A morning walk (alone, together) exploring landing as a practice of communing with land (incl. birds, wind, trees etc.), asking permission, exploring the island by being called/invited (by others or our own subconscious interpretation of others)
Breakfast & debrief from the morning walk. Departure by Ferry from Seili to Nauvo, Bus from Nauvo to Turku, Train from Turku to Helsinki.
More information about active research projects. https://www.utu.fi/en/units/cerut/archipelago-research-institute/Pages/home.aspx
weather station on Seili. http://saaristomeri.utu.fi/weather/
acoustic kitty (cold war augmented feline recording device, not the indy band)
El mar la mar (2017) - IMDb
sonic sea (documentary)
leviathan (sensory ethnography lab)
FoAM's landing practices
What is our role as guests/travellers?
Sense and sensing are forms of divination, of prediction. Augury may be defined as the practice of interpreting omens from the observed flight or dance of non-humans, tracked by GPS or satellite; divining both the past and the future, not any present but sheer persistence which is beyond appearance, offering either transcendent meaning or only the earth… —Martin Howse
The group considered the way that sensing the environment, with the body and with instruments, could open the potential of divination as an aesthetic practice to reveal meanings and even derive potential and information from objects, organisms, and states of change in the natural world. Divination, for these practitioners, seemed to be defined in opposition to understandings of the environment that might be constructed as shared or even universal, as in the case of the scientific use of technical instrumentation or data-driven interpretation of organisms or environments. Instead, divinations in this context denote a radical subjectivity such that an individual’s personal experience—for example, an interpretation of signs from animals or the weather—is taken to be meaningful. This process might well involve the use of geophysical sensors, barometers, electrical meters, and the like, but the use of those technologies is not to create a shared meaning for a group or community, but to provide personalized data for individual interpretation http://artjournal.collegeart.org/?p=11090&fbclid=IwAR0oPrLO_r5A6PV9M5L18dk72W0skEEvCI5vbbkSEvaPnqiafp1HB1CqqUU