Finally at MoMA after two years of hearing & reading about it & Loic Tallon's work on my MA Museums & Galleries in ed course & conferences :)
From around 2016 I think!
I have an ongoing interest in the The Great North Wood. When working on projects about The Crystal Palace I became entranced by the idea of the wood that previously covered much of the local area - It would have spanned from Camberwell to Croydon!
I recently developed two music and storytelling projects for adults with learning disabilities about the Great North Wood. The first was a weekly class for adults with learning disabilities based at West Norwood Leisure Centre about The Great North Wood, developed with a collective entitled Sound Tracks. This comprises of Keith Park, Emmie Ward and me.
The second project was in association with The London Wildlife Trust and funded by the Crystal Palace Park Fund. Coralie Oddy, Emmie Ward and I developed and delivered 10 sessions for adults with learning disabilities in Crystal Palace Park about it's history - centring on its history as part of The Great North Wood. Find out more about Sound Tracks here.
In May 2013, I jointly created a tree walk in Crystal Palace Park with a museum colleague. The walk included nature activities and storytelling about the Great North Wood for local children.
In June 2015, I jointly curated an event about The Great North Wood in Brockwell Park as part of the MADD 2015 programme. The event included folk music, blue printing and storytelling.
Helped with a park survey today with the park community stakeholder group. Fascinating just how many dogs were in the park. Should have been counting dogs! Was also good to have conversations with people about my trail and think I have a couple of interested people... And I always gain good food for thought in any situation... I seem to let everything be an inspiration!!
South London Botanical Institute - Victorians through trade and and empire - one of three rooms for the workshop - here year 4 our children were learning about Marianne North and her art. It is near the end of the hlf funded project. The children drew and wrote accompanying labels. I was helping out on the day.
So yesterday I had the help of a friend to try out my new tascam audio recorder! Epping Forest - well a side road was the destination and all seemed to go ok! I just need to be brave and go out and practice myself now. We tried out my lovely rycote windjammer and tried out different recording levels and a couple of microphone positions. I'll maybe upload an excerpt at some point! If anyone wants to know any more technicalities then I can let them know.
I've also been thinking a bit more about interview questions for people contributing. I already have a list, but as I get nearer that point and talk with people, it becomes a bit clearer I think. In the past day or so I have decided that it would be a good idea to concentrate on a first few initial locations for the purpose of my course project. If there are more stories to be told, then I can continue with them in my own time. I feel like it takes the pressure off a bit to have a complete tour and it written about before the end of August! I shall see! I am thinking of concentrating on the top of the park, because the bottom already has the dinosaur audio tour. I'll keep you updated!
And one more - a Dino with questions and interpretation :)
Main news so far this month is that the Bromley HLF 'Parks for People' bid has been turned down, with the main reason being cited as the current possible development by ZhongRong Holdings . Also check out the 'Inspired by the Subway' project website, which has a page dedicated to the development...
I have just made a quick twitter update of the latest tweets in the ongoing Crystal Palace Development news...
East side streets....
Sydenham Wood - had a lovely walk in the wood with the London Wildlife Trust - I'm a big fan of The Great North Wood so it was fantastic to not only hear and learn about the natural environment - but also to think about the no longer present victorian houses and gardens - see above the folly and the Lebanon cedar that appeared as a shrub in a picture from 150 years ago - & the train track that once went through to the now bat inhabited tunnel - & the interconnected-ness of it all... enjoyed the rain though of course I treated myself to some cake and tea upon return.
Taking a step back in time, this is a journal type entry I wrote a week back:
Having lived in Vienna for five years I know the feeling of being away from familiar surroundings and a constant wonder of if your new home will ever feel like a real home. There are inevitably a variety of factors involved in how at home you feel: who is around you, what job you are doing, any familiar objects (such as in the home). However, we are all inevitably affected by place. It is the overall feeling. I feel it in my bones – apologies if I am stating what may seem as obvious to others, but there is something in the saying. Our bodies are good indicators of how we are experiencing life and for me, beyond doubt, an outward expression of those feelings inside.
When I am away from home – either having moved somewhere new (whether it is in London or abroad) I increasingly feel like what I witness in cats when they move; The slow wandering into the new environment to find my feet – to return back to my base. I often don’t feel at home in my flat or house until I have made connections with the outside environment – place and people included. I often prefer to wander rather than be in a new home. I have also increasingly appreciated the sense of a need for a home base. I love traveling, but have always felt that I want a home base. Something I have not found really and in some places it is easier than in others. Crystal Palace has a huge potential for me. I am trying to attach myself even more to this area for reasons and feelings of nostalgia in the knowledge that our family has roots in the area – in particular my grandma – and in many ways her lost stories here. I hope I can find them in the space. I also have my own past connections with having lived in West Norwood for years before moving away and back again.
I like to think about how we form links and connections with places…
As I start my journey on the overground on this day, I begin my book about psychogeography. The first pages talk of psychogeography being a tale of two cities / London and Paris - that’s ok and that’s good as I know I am in a significant place to start my research. If I can go to Paris to try out a trail/walk there, then that would be a bonus.
I am obsessed with connections and links and making sense of the world. I think making sense of the world is key to any form of learning and something that we are often trying to do throughout or lives, even when it is more subconscious – it is something that my experience of Montessori practice has taught me. It has always intrigued me and it seemed to make so much sense when first reading about her philosophy. It is again something that may seem obvious to us but for me it was the first time I had thought of education in that way. The philosophy is based on creating materials that make sense and help children to understand different elements and theories, which in turn help them and us with out greater understanding of the world. Montessori was also very much for her education helping towards creating world peace and I think that is a pretty noble thing. I will try and find some inspiring quotes in due course. I am intrigued to find out whether any of it will have any relevance to my project!! Same with psychogeography!
On my journey, I pass by scenery that even if I have passed through it a few times before, I have never really looked at. A lot reminds me of Vienna and definitely triggered my thoughts in that respect.
At the Museum of London, I notice all the wonderful books about London – I am sure that is something that has increased in recent years. So many of the most intriguing seem to be on titles such as: ‘Secret London’ – It feels like a recent phenomena to me – that we are trying to find those hidden parts of the city to feel like we have found something special and unique.
I am interested in the choice of obscure places to create a trail? They often seem a bit more obscure, also off the beaten track- something that I will have to go out of my way to try out. This will make a new experience for me in itself. From the brief overview that I have at the moment, it seems like people have made some trails as part of a process for people in areas of change – and are in fact – probably quite political. Psychogeography is set to have one root in an obscure cemetery, linked to the dissenter Defoe… I still need to read more…
I am wondering what does child development and psychology in general say about place and time? Any links?
Image taken from page 49 of 'Memories of the Great Metropolis: or London from the Tower to the Crystal Palace' by The British Library on Flickr.
From the British Library's newly released millions of images into the public domain! I had to do a CP search of course!
Teaching, learning, music, heritage, nature, theatre, stories, art, cats, community, diversity. Kent, U.K. Instagram: @ret_uk
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