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Unfolding The Park

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Unfolding The Park

Presented by AILA Cultivate

I recently joined a series of speakers to take people on a guided walk through the Queen Victoria Gardens and the Kings Domain. We each chose a plant species, built intervention or area of the garden to act as a vector from which we could trace back or speculate-forward.

I wove together the Silurian sediments and their formation into a poem that traced the connections between our bodies, deep time and the process of settling.


Unfolding

What is it to unfold this body

on this Earth,

this 400 million-year-old

bedrock cushioned by 

soils and grass

Together we settle

like deep water sediments

At first

we 

mirror

shorelines

waves and currents

pulled this way and that

suspended amongst

the grit and gravel 

washed from distant mountains

from histories that shaped us, crafted us. 

we fell from waterfalls

rolled in cataracts and tumbled in rivers 

together, swept from Gondwanan shorelines

We are now, 

drifting

suspended

supported 

embraced in shallow blue waters

benthic creatures crawl beneath us, 

trilobites with hard shells and flat bodies, 

snail-like gastropods, corals and speckled starfish. 

We drift further, lighter

shell grit, mica, and quartz roll and wash beneath us 

we settle more,

tension

drops like sand

through water

Sediments

settling to this

Silurian sea floor

We travel

on currents

following upwellings,

eddies and conveyor belts 

falling as turbidities,

vast underwater landslides

caught in oceanic gyres

channels of water 

churned by

equatorial winds.

It is a 

deeper ocean now

the water is clearer

We are fine particles of clay 

drifting down through

sunlit water columns

graptolites, communities

of micro animals

float by us 

in the deep

their bodies  

wavy fern-like threads 

all settling down

together

layer upon layer upon

layer. Sand, mud, silt.

We are all this

sediments settled

on a distant sea floor

We are earth now

a cycle

finding our way back, across millions of years

to Mountains, 

to folding, rolling, faulting, rising earth

to road cuttings

and soft grass

To this moment now

bodies settled like deep water sediments

lying here, resting on 

oceanic bedrock that was once mountains

that is now, making its way back to the sea

along a river, in currents and eddies. 


This event was made possible through generous support from the City of Melbourne.

Lead Photo: Neil Parley

Sunday 5th of March

11am - 12pm


Speakers

Philomena Manifold

Emile Zile

Luca Lana

Renee Miller-Yeaman

Alistair Kirkpatrick

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Map Festival – Rainbow

More photos at: Jeremy Kruckel

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