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Anecdotal Cardiff
Ben Fincham
We
say that time passes or flows by. We speak of the course of time.
The water that I see rolling by was made ready a few days ago
in the mountains, with the melting of the glacier; it is now in
front of me and makes its way towards the sea into which it will
finally discharge itself. If time is similar to a river, it flows
from the past towards the present and the future. The present
is the consequence of the past, and the future of the present.
But
looking at the things themselves, the melting of the
snows and what results are not successive events, or rather the
very notion of event has no place in the objective world. When
I say that the day before yesterday the glacier produced the water
which is passing by at this moment, I am tacitly assuming the
existence of a witness tied to a certain spot in the world and
I am comparing his [sic] successive views.
Maurice Merleau-Ponty - The Phenomenology of Perception (1962)
A
person's sense of place in the world is most universally expressed
through their sense of living and being in spaces. It is something
common to us all. Every body occupies and lives in spaces designed
by nature, by our predecessors, by our contemporaries and by ourselves
- and are understood through our subjective selves. The way in
which we perceive lived spaces are most acutely articulated through
our individual understandings of home and, as a consequence, belonging
to - or occasionally alienation from - the spaces that we spend
most time in.
By
asking people to tell their stories and talk about their feelings
towards the city of Cardiff a unique map of a population's home
is being created. It is a map where no single building or street
is the same, as every part of the city is seen through different
eyes and understood in relation to individual experiences. Places
of no consequence for one person are of monumental significance
for another. It is an archive of a place in time, rather than
a place in geography. The narratives across three generations
of people living and working in Cardiff give a unique opportunity
to follow disparate lives along common roads.
The
narratives provided by contributors to this work may be providing
a 'snapshot' of their lives and of the city of Cardiff, but the
way in which Jennie/Savage uses them ensures that they are not
transitory accounts; they are neither lost in nostalgia nor fixed
in time. By recording and interpreting these stories Jennie/Savage
permits us to create our own maps according to others' experiences
and opinions. By visiting and revisiting these accounts we constantly
refresh our own views of Cardiff, by reflecting on our own constantly
changing standpoint in relation to the experiences of others.
This is essentially a process of history building, both personal
and social. Our personal histories are to a large extent informed
by where we live and where we feel we belong, and these feelings
are intrinsically linked to our perception of the city, town or
village itself. In this case the social history of Cardiff is
being compiled through the personal histories of the residents
who have contributed memories, thoughts and feelings to this project.
The
testimonies, by their compilation alone, are transformed into
icons or monuments in the same way that buildings, streets and
events are. They are located in the time at which they were constructed
and then interpreted and incorporated into the present; other
things are built around them, they are destroyed and forgotten
or exist in the stories of others. The stories in Jennie/Savages
work will be talked about in the same way that the story-tellers
themselves are talking about the world, they become a part of
the city of Cardiff as much as any physical infrastructure or
civic institution.
By allowing other artists to provide representations of some of
the narratives elevate them still further into iconic monuments.
The interpretation of others' interpretations completes the exercise
in subjective abstraction and iconism - and it is fitting that
the stories of the (extra) ordinary citizens of Cardiff are recorded,
interpreted and celebrated.
From
my window overlooking courtyard and gardens, the view and the
offer of space is very different. Over the gardens, the differences
of habitual rhythms fade; they seem to disappear into a sculptural
immobility.
Henri Lefebvre - Writings on Cities
(1996)
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