Everyday
Archaeology
Project
Lead:
Giles Lane
Team: Alice Angus, Orlagh
Woods & Sarah Thelwall
Partners: to be confirmed
Funding: seeking funds
Outline
‘Everyday Archaeology’ is the term used by creative studio
Proboscis to describe investigations of the local environment using a
combination of tools and techniques created by us as part of our Social
Tapestries project. Social Tapestries aims to enable people to become
the co-creators of a ‘public knowledge commons’ by linking
their own knowledge and experience to the local geography. In this way
we hope to reveal the rich tapestry of relationships between people, places
and things that exists in the local environment of everyday life. We believe
that this sharing of knowledge and experience helps create new ‘cultures
of listening’ – which in turn promote greater understanding
and appreciation of difference.
To help us
achieve this vision, Proboscis has developed a number of tools and techniques
that facilitate storytelling, knowledge sharing and mapping, gathering
evidence and relationship building. These tools bridge the online and
offline, digital and analogue worlds in an effort to engage with a wide,
intergenerational group of people.
The tools include our Urban
Tapestries (UT) software platform for mapping and sharing local knowledge;
the Feral
Robots which detect environmental pollution and upload to the UT platform
for mapping; StoryCubes
which enable visual storytelling in three dimensions; and DIFFUSION
eBooks, a unique publishing system that enables people to create simple
downloadable paper publications. Our techniques include Bodystorming
Experiences which transform abstract ideas and concepts into physical
experiences enabling participants to explore new ideas in a tactile and
tangible way; workshops for transferring skills and capabilities; and
forums for sharing knowledge and experiences.
Approach
Each Everyday Archaeology project will excavate layers of knowledge,
memory, experience and data about local environments in participation
with local communities – such as schools, local residents or local
action groups. Each layer excavated will build upon the others to create
a rich and complex picture of the environment and the communities who
inhabit it. Projects will be delivered through participatory experiences,
events and workshops designed to reach across different age groups and
communities. Everyday Archaeology is designed to encourage people to become
scientists and archaeologists, peeling back layers of history and memory
through knowledge sharing and evidence gathering – at the same time
building up a rich tapestry of stories that describe the environment and
community in new ways.
Goals
Proboscis intends to run a series of collaborative projects under the
banner of Everyday Archaeology that help communities investigate their
local environment using the tools and techniques we're developing in Social
Tapestries. Our aim is to stimulate an ongoing and sustainable process
of exploration of their local environment by the communities we work with,
creating and sharing all kinds of new knowledge and experience as well
as gathering evidence where necessary to effect action on local issues.
Projects
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