“A soundscape of plant music in urban space - quite literally, the music of the streets.
An online interactive exhibition that explores our humanness in relation to self, others, and our shared environments by exploring and engaging with plants that grow in urban environments. This is a collaborative project to co-create a soundscape made from plant music, with the location of each plant across the city of London being mapped visually here online for all to see. By translating these plants' inaudible frequencies into sound, we can hear their unheard songs and further encourage a new way of listening to the earth.
This is a collective process of research, learning, and creation. Through the building of a community of people, through the sharing of individuals' stories, and dreams, and through messages of hope inspired by nature, together we create a collective chorus to inspire positive change as we reconnect with nature in new and innovative ways. Nature is art; nature is the artistic expression of the earth through which life is sustained and is able to thrive. The earth must continually regenerate and grow a diverse range of life; the earth's creativity is necessary for its own survival, as well as all living beings through which its creativity gives life. We owe our lives to the earth's ongoing creative abundance.
Our own free artistic expression is essential to our own survival. We must acknowledge and develop an awareness of our interconnection with all things in order to deepen our compassion for one another. Another step in this direction can be through the study of the convergence of plants and humans that inhabit the same or similar environments. In urban environments, weeds can spread with relentless vigour, or pop up on a brick wall and get passed by unseen. By taking note of the overlooked world of plants in urban landscapes growing in hostile environments, by observing their resilience and beauty, we are compelled to experience our reality differently through the observation of the natural elements in our cities. Through the recognition of the diversity shown in nature, we can reflect this back into our own societies and truly celebrate our differences: to welcome new ways of seeing our shared world and those with whom we share it.”
Final Project Website:
https://www.opalinequill.com/clockflowerwishes