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When
you are on a quest, you do things from a deep instinctive place.
Then, after a while,
sometimes a long time, as you put together various
bits like feedback, road companions, synchronicities… you
spin a thread of understanding besides observing a theme or two.
The South Eastern Center of Contemporary Art, SECCA/Winston-Salem, inviting
me to participate in their theme exhibition“Destruction/ Reclamation:
Art & The Environment in the 90ies,” assumed I would deal with
what had absorbed me during The Great Cleansing of the Rio Grande and
sent me boxes of information on North Carolinian water issues. After
six years (by then) of mostly solitary work in the river, I was yearning
to be with people. By going around North Carolina and listening to
environmentalists, I wanted to show that environmentalists and artists,
doing their specific
work for the earth, have much more in common than society let us believe.
I call my-kind-of-weaving-through-listening:‘waving.’
Somewhere in the eastern mountains, I came upon the Rural Southern Voice
for Peace. “RSVP does Listening Projects,” said the brochure,“ and
trains others to do them. Trained listeners go door to door asking community
members heartful questions about controversial public issues.” In
retrospect, encountering the rural grassroots group was a major thread
confirming for me the premise beyond my work, i.e.that we come to greater
understanding by listening to each other from the deepest feeling place
possible. Because the best listeners are best at learning how to listen,
this has spurred my interest in learning more about listening from many
different angles. (See DeepListening ™ in
links)
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