First Friday Walk

1 November 2024 a Walking the Land artist collective monthly event. This Friday’s brief was by Janette Kerr and me, Tamsin Grainger and part of the Lines of Enquiry, a collective walking art project which will culminate in a group exhibition in 2025.

Look for somewhere to sit, stand or crouch on your own. Pause. Close your eyes and concentrate on listening.

Try to separate out all the sounds you can hear.

Using a piece of paper and pencil, crayon or pen, and with your eyes still closed, make marks on your paper that you think might represent the sounds you are hearing (don’t try to make a picture of, or draw, the thing making the noise!)

Spend as long as you like doing this. You might stop and do it several times during the walk.

If you are walking with others, you might try this together on one piece of paper.

Here are the What3Words locations for the 6 stops we made along part of the Edinburgh Cycle Path network, connecting in spirit with others who were walking along the Honeybourne Line (Gloucestershire) and elsewhere.

  1. ///Causes.Host.Home
  2. ///Perky.Fetch.Useful
  3. ///Notice.Case.Bugs
  4. ///Linked.Tides.Eager
  5. ///Bounty.Belong.Only
  6. ///Maker.Exit.Corn
  7. ///Friday.Notice.Retail
Damp earth causes stains
Tree hosts magpies and sparrows
Home is far away.
Perky dog's tail wags
'Fetch' calls his human with joy
Useful happinness.
Part of the No Birds Land sound walk installation
Under the Bridge. Edinburgh cycle paths. Photo Janette Kerr
Notice how cold stone
Is, in case of chills and piles
Bugs me every time.
Where the 5-ways meet on the Edinburgh Cycle Path
Log sitting linked to
Ruth, tides away from here, though
Eager to connect.
Not Log Letters but Log Drawings (of the soundscape)
Pigeon poo bounty
Belongs here under the bridge
Who to? Only coo!
Despite the metal mesh, the pigeons roost in the roof of the old railway tunnel where Janette draws
Maker mark on pipes
No exit for the sewage
Rose and corn coloured.
Strange, but serious pipes on the hillside
First Friday walking
Notice the noise of the drill
Retail shop going up.
Final stop: drawing together, opposite each other at the end of the Leith Path near the Edinburgh Sculpture Workshop
Some of the drawings made during the First Friday Walk (November 2024 by Janette and Tamsin)

Notes

On the ‘Log sitting …’ haiku: ‘Ruth’ refers to Ruth Broadbent and our project Conversations from a Log

International Walking Encounters

June 2021

Walking as a Question took place simultaneously in the Prespa area of north western Greece and internationally, online.

The Walking Conference asked: What questions does walking pose?  What questions can walking be used to explore?  Who walks?  Who chooses to walk? Who is forced to walk?  Who can walk? Who cannot?

And stated: In raising walking as a question in itself, we invite critical and artistic engagement with the limits and possibilities of this most everyday of modalities.  Borders and checkpoints curtail walking. Dog companions stimulate a stroll.  People have been forcibly marched to new territories. People have walked across enormous distances in search of refuge, asylum and freedom. Some use parks and hiking trails for their regular exercise; others walk miles to work; still others must contend with walls or constricted spaces such as in a prison yard or camp.

I took part in these projects in Edinburgh, Scotland as the Covid pandemic was restricting travel at that time:

Awareness Walk

Sandra Cowan and Annie Martin (Lethbridge Walking, Canada) The Walking as a Question page

Walking A Line

Ruth Broadbent (UK). Participant drawings are here

Port Limani

Deirdre McLeod and Stephanie Whitelaw with Artwalkporty (Scotland), who are also connected with the new walking app Walksy which is free to download from your app store – easy and fun to use

Wunderkammer

These are some of my wunderkammers, inspired by Fay Stevens (Walkeology)

Body Walking

My event was Body Walking which culminated on July 17th 2021 with an online sharing and discussion with those who tried ‘walking in someone else’s footsteps’. You can find out more information on my website tamsingrainger.com here:

Bodywalking photos taken in Paris, France.

Always, thanks to walklistencreate.org home of walking goodness

Cover photo taken in Athens and all other photos ©TamsinGrainger unless permission given