Drawing on the work of Pauline Oliveros and others, artist Ian Nesbitt holds space for deep listening as a transformative collective practice. This is not a conversation, but an invitation to listen deeply, and share what emerges. Freed from the need to respond, the practice allows participants to listen for understanding rather than agreement.
Each session begins with the prompt ‘Where do you find yourselves?’ Asking where we find ourselves calls us into dialogue with our surroundings. It calls us to behold and reflect on our relationships with other beings. It calls us to make space for our individual and collective griefs, and for that which does not make sense yet.
Gently proposing a shift from ‘Festival of Debate’ to ‘Festival of Listening’, these events question the place of combative verbosity in any speculative futures that we might envisage, asking participants to imagine how a political institution such as the House of Commons might benefit from becoming, even temporarily, the House of Listening.
The in-person event takes place at Bloc Projects, in conjunction with the exhibition Grief must be Love with Nowhere to Go by Chris Alton and Emily Simpson. Artist Ian Nesbitt, who has been facilitating these sessions for two years, says: “Co-listening is a practice of togetherness, addressing the question of how to live well amongst the grief and debris of a collapsing system."
In person event:
1 May, 7–8:30pm, Bloc Projects – register now
Online event:
8 May, 7–8:30pm – register now
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- Festival of Debate