Correspondences. Tim Ingold

Correspondences - Tim Ingold


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The way of art

      Taking metaphorical truths literally, however, is not just the way of poetry; it is also – and perhaps above all – the way of art. The work of the artist is to embody such truths, to make them viscerally present to us, so that we can experience them in their immediacy. The majority of essays gathered here were originally written in response to artistic provocations. Some were commissioned by the artists themselves, or by the curators of their works; others were composed on my own initiative. It is not my purpose to make any judgement, aesthetic or otherwise, of the art itself. I offer no expert interpretation or analysis. I write as an amateur respondent, not a professional critic. But working in the medium of words, I have set out to insert my own voice into the correspondence. And to be honest, I have very much enjoyed doing so. It has been a relief to drop my academic persona and write with my own voice, hand and heart. Above all, I have relished the freedom both to embrace fresh ideas and to be shaken up and disturbed by them.

      1 1. ‘The crisis of education’ (1954), in Hannah Arendt: Between Past and Future, introduced by Jerome Kohn, London: Penguin, 2006, pp. 170–93, see p. 193.

      2 2. Tim Ingold, ‘Anthropology beyond humanity’ (Edward Westermarck Memorial Lecture, May 2013), Suomen Antropologi 38(3), 2013: 5–23.

      3 3. Tim Ingold, The Life of Lines, Abingdon: Routledge, 2015, pp. 147–53.

      4 4. Amanda Ravetz, ‘BLACK GOLD: trustworthiness in artistic research (seen from the sidelines of arts and health)’, Interdisciplinary Science Reviews 43, 2018: 348–71.

      5 5. Ravetz, ‘BLACK GOLD’, p. 362.

      6 6. ‘Digging’, in Seamus Heaney, New Selected Poems, 1966–1987, London: Faber & Faber, 1990, pp. 1–2.

      Can there be any better example of conviviality, of living and growing together, than the trees of a wood? They are so much more sociable than people. Humans come and go, obsessed by passing troubles. But trees stand their ground. They tell tales, they communicate among themselves; older trees watch over young saplings, which sprout amidst the roots of their forebears. We humans are but diminutive eavesdroppers on their long, majestic conversations. Enter the woods, then, as into a library or a cathedral, with a certain reverence. Sociology begins here, in your studies with the trees. Ahead of you, like rows of books on the shelves, or the columns of the nave, are the serried ranks of trunks. Each trunk – each codex, as the ancients called both trunk and book – holds its story, not between its covers, as with the book, but up aloft, as with the fan-vaulting of the cathedral roof or the branching tracery of its windows. You’ll need to strain your neck to read it.

      Peer closely into the canopy, listen intently, feel the textures of bark and moss as if they were under your skin or fingernails. No doubt you feel more alive in the presence of trees. Yet to us, they seem to speak in riddles. Even as we strain to decipher their meanings, we sense no progress towards clarity. In the woods, everything is so complicated! It is, quite literally, folded together – from the Latin com, ‘together’ plus plicare, ‘to fold’. Of the trees that gather there, we cannot say where one ends and another begins. They don’t adjoin or abut like fragments of a mosaic, or square up back to back, each sunk into itself. Rather, they fold over and into each other as they go along. Observe the ground, riddled with roots that threaten to trip you up, the ridged and furrowed tree bark, the ruffled wind-swept mass of foliage. Every line of the gathering is a fold in the fabric of a crumpled world.

      On New Year’s Day, 2016, I – along with some thirty others – received an invitation from the writer and broadcaster Tim Dee to compose an essay on the topic of a place that personally speaks to me. Tired of the numbing combination of facts and spirituality that permeates so much contemporary environmental writing, Dee wanted to show how precious ordinary places are to us, and why it is so important that we continue to care for them. A place, we were told, could be anything or anywhere. It might be a hollow tree or the corner of a street, a childhood bedroom or a sewage farm. It could be in the paved world of the city, with its streets and buildings, or in the vegetated world of the countryside, with its fields and forests. All that mattered was that it should be close to our hearts. The essays would eventually be assembled


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