The Tower Block – post mortemIn 2011 the old city hospital in Trondheim - a gigantic 12 store tower block - was demolished, giving space for a new modern hospital. With it, an emotional land mark in the city has disappeared, as this tower block was the location of memories of birth, death, crisis and healing for a lot of people in Trondheim. We collected many of these memories through a memory blog. This blog founded the basis for the production of a performance, or rather a ritual, serving as a funeral for the Tower block, held in the midst of its ruins.
In the blue block above you will find samples from the project:
Memories
Performance
Research The nature of memories and remembering: What role do place and emptiness play in wakening the presence of things gone? In what way does the technology that mediates memory contribute in shaping the content of the memories? More specifically, what role do the writing of memories at the blog and the performance play for the memories of the Tower block? For more about memories and ruins, see the site Ruin memories. Performance studies: What can we learn about performance from a project where the performance is the actual burying of a hospital building? This question is calling us to explore the boarders between site specific performance and ritual. The nature of the interactive media event: We explore the nature of the creative process and role of the memory blog, starting with us sharing our memories on the blog, causing other people to share their memories, which aging inspires us to shape to the performance. This shape where constantly modified in interaction with people active on the blog. In the performance the memories where finally given back in artistic form and shared. Thus, the blog, the talk among people, the emerging consciousness of the disappearing landmark and the work with the performance, all took shape in the same system, a sort of auto-poetic feedback loop. At its horizon, the actual demolition process constantly moved towards the inevitable destruction of the old Tower block.
People |