CURRENT PROJECTS

’s/Wake


A man and a woman, long married, are locked down for most of an entire year alongside, but socially distanced from, the rest of the UK population. As the couple bicker and blunder through the days – as if in some Beckettian nightmare – the woman kept a diary. In a series of fragmentary notations made in the app Evernote, the diary records her and also not her; not only how the many, many individuals living under the same conditions felt, but how these thoughts were expressed: the shared terminology, the shared assumptions. Not the ego-led ‘insipid moral musings’, loathed by Roland Barthes, that prioritise an interior ‘self’, but rather an entanglement of voices, a record of social mores: what was said, how it was said, who was doing the saying.

This is the second ‘diary project’ I have worked on; a diary that incorporates news reports, receipts, advertisements and flyers, interwoven with fragments of speech overheard on the radio, at the bus stop, in the cafes – all the ‘litter’ from the external world. Images of the first, de Umbris Idæarum [on the Shadow Cast by our Thoughts], which is a record of the year 2011, can be seen HERE.

’s/Wake, recorded over 2021, consists of 5,252 notations – a total of 686,288 words – and is currently being edited down (although not by very much). I hope to complete the work, which will take the form of a single, large book – or ‘involuntary novel’ – by early 2026. I have written about it HERE.

An essay by the art historian Margaret Iversen, which discusses this work alongside that of photographer and film maker Moyra Davey, can be found HERE.

STREAM


I started using Instagram at the end of 2019, less than six months before the UK’s first period of Lockdown. I was intending to document my then-recent commission to make new Jacquard tapestries for the library and study centre at St John’s College, Oxford. Instead, because everything had ground to a halt, I began to consider Instagram as a medium. The various constraints – 2,200 characters for the caption, the square format, the way video would loop endlessly but was limited to one minute – appealed to me. Most of these constraints have now gone. However, throughout 2024, I began posting short videos on Stories: views over rooftops, or from the bus; a lone cyclist at night. I am currently editing the material – an entire year's worth – into an ‘involuntary’ film that, from my current estimate, will be about 18 hours long. 

WATCH IT HERE

TRAIN FILM


At the start of 2023, I found myself restless, eager to travel. Then I found myself unable to stop. Addicted to train timetables, I planned each journey with military precision. Each time I set off, a wrench. Was I running away from something? I kept travelling, and filming, until late 2024. I am now editing this material together. Only when you see it through the lens, as film (and not when you experience it in real life), do you notice the relation of images shot from a train to the flicker, the filmstrip and the blind spot of early cinema.

WATCH IT HERE