Walk on the Beach: Things from the Sea, Volume 1
- Edited by Maggie M. Williams, Karen Eileen Overbey
- Contributions by Anna Kłosowska, Christina McPhee, Elizabeth Currans, Vanessa Daws, Emily Gephart, Elliott Ihm, Steve Mentz, Emily Russell
Published on June 17, 2016 by punctum books
- Pages
- 60 pages
- Languages
- English
- Dimensions
- 6⤫6 in.
- ISBN (Paperback)
- ISBN: 978-0-692-70764-7 (Paperback)
- BISAC subject codes
- BISAC: ART006010
- Thema subject codes
- THEMA: 1QS, DNL
This volume brings together writing and imagery from the experimental “beachwalk” session(s) at the Third Biennial Meeting of the BABEL Working Group, On the Beach: Precariousness, Risk, Forms of Life, Affinity, and Play at the Edge of the World(opens in new tab). We began with conversations about the sea. We meditated together on chance, discovery, agency, beauty, and material ecology. We talked about the delicate care of treading the world, the confluence of the personal and the professional, and the possibilities of storytelling. We thought about what happens when we encounter stuff, when we take it, change it, do something with it. When we display it, or sculpt it, or collect it. When we make something an object, and an object of looking.
Then we met on the beach. We walked and talked about loss, home, agency, and liminality. We collected things: We picked up stones, feathers, seaweed. We pointed to stuff, gathered it, let it strike our fancy. Every shell nurtured a conversation among the artists, scientists, historians, poets, archivists, surfers, philosophers, and pirates who had joined the walk. We brought the sea-things back, manipulated them, and displayed them as works of art.
Walk on the Beach is a souvenir of that project, a record of our bounty. It emerges from the process at the heart of art historical work: close looking. Thinking through objects, thinking with objects. Letting the things help us tell their stories.
This is a tiny collection of looking, together.
Contents
Frontmatter (1–3)
This Is the First (4–5)
Maggie M. Williams, Karen Eileen Overbey
Beachcombing (20–40)
Maura Coughlin, Asa Simon Mittman, Lora Webb, Jeffrey Jerome Cohen
Beach Intentions, Adrift (41–54)
Emily Russel
Backmatter (55–60)
Biographies
Karen Overbey (Associate Professor, Tufts University) and Maggie M. Williams (Associate Professor, William Paterson University) have spent a lifetime collaborating and walking together on the beach. Maggie is author of Icons of Irishness from the Middle Ages to the Modern World (Palgrave Macmillan, 2012) and Karen is author of Sacral Geographies: Saints, Shrines, and Territory in Medieval Ireland (Brepols, 2011). They are both founding members of the Material Collective(opens in new tab).
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Genres
- Biosphere
- Thought Experiments
Keywords
- art
- beach
- objects
- ocean
- photography
