As A Machine That Would Never Break
Watershed: A River’s Call to Action is a collaborative project with XAP - a response to the violation of our UK rivers by neglect and mismanagement. The first phase of the project was hosted within the magnificent North Transept of St Alban’s Cathedral, and focussed in particular on the nearby River Ver – a very special chalk stream – which has has been subjected to sewage dumping, with little respite, over the last year and beyond.
As A Machine That Would Never Break is a continuous interactive video installation, created for Watershed. It speaks of an abused river pushed to breaking point. Over 100 pieces of footage of the rivers Ver and Lea, shifting in scale, texture and cadence, play in random layered sequence, creating a never-repeating flow over the month-long installation. Via an Xbox Kinect, visitors are transported into the artwork itself, immersed in sparkling watercourses, bobbing amongst sewage and everything in between. Text fragments are harvested randomly from online documents: data points of every sewage discharge into the Ver since the project began, water testing data, Thames Water’s Annual Report 2023-4, riverfly counts, road runoff reports and more.
Watershed: A River’s Call to Action, 1st-31st May 2025, St Albans Cathedral. Events organised as part of this month-long project, include A Watershed Debate, bringing together diverse voices, including Erica Popplewell, Campaigns Manager at River Action UK, Daisy Cooper MP, John Pritchard, chair of conservation group the Ver Valley Society and Dr Hilary Marlow, Canon Environmentalist, Fellow of Girton College, Cambridge.
Interactive video installation programmed in C++/openFrameworks on MacOS + Xbox Kinect.
Source video captured by Angela Mellen, Liz Sergeant, Laura Dekker.
Back projection, dimensions: 3.4m x 2.4m x 3.0m