audio walk

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Description (in English)

Last word is a literary audio walk through the forest in Amsterdam. During the walk you listen to four voices that lead you to a place where the story - a bitter sweet family history about parting, punishment, insanity, and acknowledgement - comes to a surprising end. The walker chooses his or her own direction at a crossing-point which also determines the perspective of the story: Jason, little Kees, Helga or Carlotta. What connects these four people? Do they meet each other at the end of the story at the agreed place. 

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Contributors note

Laatste woord is een literaire luisterloop door het Amsterdamse bos. Tijdens de wandeling leiden vier stemmen je naar een plek waar het verhaal - een bitterzoete familiegeschiedenis over afscheid, straf, gekte, en erkenning - tot een verrassend einde komt. De wandelaar bepaalt zelf op de kruispunten de richting van zijn route en daarmee ook het perspectief van het verhaal: dat van Jason, kleine Kees, Helga of Carlotta. Wat bindt deze vier mensen? Ontmoeten ze elkaar inderdaad na afloop op de afgesproken plek? 

Description (in English)

Audio walk around the Kunstmuseum of Bonn (DE). Reflections on the flâneur and the possibility of the flâneuse, even if not invisible in the crowd.

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"Walking is linked to questions of space, representation and gender. It is also related to vision, to seeing and being seen, becoming visible or remaining invisible"

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Contributors note

This site-specific audio-walk was developed for the exhibition “The Flaneur: From Impressionism to the Present” at the Kunstmuseum Bonn. Taking Edgar Allan Poe’s short story “The Man of the Crowd” as a starting point, it examines the topic of flanerie and presents four alternative characters from fine art and literature as female flaneuses. While listening to their stories, the participant is led through the area surrounding the museum.

“When we think of the woman in the crowd, walking among other people, does she ever turn around and look back? Suddenly having distinct features, a personality, an identity? What if she, in turn, was the flaneur, or rather the flaneuse? One that is not relegated to the periphery? One that has her own way, her own wishes and desires? Is it even possible to think of a figure that transcends this binary opposition of established gender norms?”

Description (in English)

Reflects on the flâneuse, the agency that women take as they walk alone at night.

Pull Quotes

"...darkness is as protective as she is possessive. She wraps her arms tightly around our bodies, shielding us from the others' gaze, we become indistinguishable from each other and might even hide within a crowd. But darkness extends the same protective impulse towards the others as well, can we recognise then who poses a threat to us?"

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Contributors note

In this audio-walk, participants accompany a female protagonist through a park area at dusk. She embodies the spirit of fictional and real women who claimed their freedom to wander, thus challenging the restrictions and conventions of their culture and time. The audio piece mixes narrative, text excerpts, music and field recordings. The sun sets while the participant walks, bringing out other qualities of this environment.

“Refusing to be the object of anyone’s gaze, she decides to walk into the park at the fall of night. Directly within the city, yet isolated from its busy streets. She enters this space with the intention of becoming completely invisible, merging with the surroundings in a strange half-absence of the body.”