1st, 2nd and 3rd: early Christmas family gathering in Wargrave followed by Auntie Kathleen’s funeral in New Brighton. New and old generations, parents mistaken for grandparents, no longer living relatives present in the faces of grandchildren. The Thames filling its valley, overflowing; changing parks, fields and cricket ground to reflected sky, the Mersey vibrant and forceful rushing between the wirral and the city. Both rivers flowing as they have been across all those years.
PhD Archive
Welcome to the Phd Blog
Keeping the blog was an important thread in weaving the research, the drawing practice and community facilitation. The degree of Doctor of Philosophy was awarded by the University of Wales Trinity St. David in 2018.
Abstract
The research considers why aesthetics, the subjective ways in which we
experience and value places, and nature’s agency are not readily included in
decision-making processes. This action research adopts a hopeful, participatory
and auto-ethnographic inquiry into the potential for developing and applying a
relational and environmental walking-art practice to overcome this disconnect; an
approach which attempts to reconnect art and life, cultural and natural systems.
Metaphor is used as a method to reflect upon an emergent art practice. The
research considers Felix Guattari’s ideas of transversality, developing an ethicoaesthetic paradigm as a critical framework, taking into account the work of relevant
practitioners and specifically Grant Kester’s arguments concerning reciprocal
creative labour. The framework is developed through a weaving metaphor and
applied to three community-led land-use change case studies; a canal restoration
project, caring for a community woodland and Landscape Character Assessment.
The weaving metaphor becomes both a process and an art work capable of
revealing and helping to incorporate subjectivity into traditionally objective
decision-making processes. As well as facilitating community-wide dialogue, the
research has, in some cases, lead to action being taken alongside nature’s
agency.
The research evaluates the transformation of the art practice and its impact, which
suggests the positive agency of art as a practical aesthetic in a social and
environmental context.
The thesis can be read here:
https://repository.uwtsd.ac.uk/id/eprint/1311/13/Keating%20R%20Landscape%20final.pdf#:~:text=As%20a%20part%20of%20post,with%20people%20in%20the%20Stroud
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Thesis, Watery Landscapes, Folly Wood, Festival of Nature
21st to 30th November: reading/writing most of the time – completing Watery Landscapes Article and getting engrossed in thesis – interspersed with on going commitments to projects
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tutorial
Tutorial with Robert Newell, Andrea Liggins and Katrin Webster, followed by meeting with Mary Davis Turner.
All very helpful and focusing.
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Vision 21 and Derby Walk
16th to 18th, writing in Laugharne with Sue Porter, Alison Parfitt, Diana Ray, Julia Bennett, Jaqui Taylor, plus Helen Keating and Glenn Hall
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thesis and Watery Landscape writing, Space Place and Practice, River
12th to 16th; writing – spend more time reading – internet is both a great help and a hinderance – this can’t be – must be a matter of learning how to make best use of the technology available.
No time to join Tara over water, other than over the sink, with view to the Severn…
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Folly Wood
Activity Day
Making new benches, tree planting and managing woodland glade.photos by Jackie Rowanly
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Thesis and Watery Landscape writing, Space Place and Practice
3rd to 9th – reading and writing
Not the first revamp of Thesis- see attached
Attachments
new-contents-october-12-1354827125.doc
rk-15th-november-without-images-1354827374.doc -
First Friday Walk
walked between the Daneway and Sapperton making sketch book work for inclusion in River project. Walked with Tara and Bart, Lucy Guenot, Jacqui Stearn, Jilly Cobb, David Moss, Arabella Lewis
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The Weave
At meeting with Max Comfort, we discussed withdrawing from Canal Forum and Neighbourhood Development Plan working group, me to concentrate on developing work with Cotswold Conservation Board (see 19th October)














