To touch lichen is to touch something that pre-exists our human lifetimes, peer closely and you see that they are all distinctly and mysteriously themselves, made up of many collaborating lifeforms. Crustose, Foliose, Fruticose – lichens thrive everywhere, on buildings, trees, rocks, road signs and gravestones.
As a movement artist, I’m interested in how the slow growth of lichens, their symbiosis and adherence to the earth might inform gentle movement, inner meditative practices and cultivate soft bodily resilience to the stresses of current times. For this period of research I am adopting lichens as my ‘more than human’ mentors. Attempting to notice and learn from them and the places in which they thrive, to move as lichen is to combine our differences, to be together in ways that we couldn’t if alone, to make something complex, unusual.
I am currently learning how to record the sounds of lichens, in an attempt to ‘feel’ into their vibrational relations with other beings. (This involves spending time in Coetir Tycanol, close to my home, one of the most diverse ecosystems of lichen species in Wales and the UK). I will document this process over the coming months, shared through the Oriel Davies website.
Lichens give us reasons to be cheerful; they combine differences, live as composites, their longevity perhaps, gives us hope.
As symbiotic communities ‘Lichen has much to teach us about our relationship to the environment and our place within a living world…this little organism with its incredible life force invites a new vision (on a new scale), a new ecology.’ – Vincent Zonca (2023)
A partnership with Oriel Davies Gallery, Newtown
Supported by Arts Council of Wales ‘Create’
December Lichen Walks, booking on: https://orieldavies.org/whats-on/becoming-lichen