Living Waters
Raleigh, North Carolina USA
Living Waters uses a diversity of rituals to call on the fundamental significance of water to human life. The piece invites cross-cultural solidarities in the face of humanitarian and climate catastrophes by exploring the unifying significance of water. The installation is housed within an emergency shelter and includes 7 jerricans of water gathered along the Cape Fear River watershed, a video installation of the surface of that body of water, and an audio collage composed of recorded water rituals and the sounds of water.
Commissioning agency: North Carolina Museum of Art
Collaborators: Kulsum Tasnif; Children of the Catawba, Coharie, Haliwa Saponi, Lumbee, Meherrin, Occaneechi, Sappony, Waccamaw Siouan Tribes recorded by Wyatt Radford and Travis Moffitt at UNC Pembroke's Museum of the Southeast American Indian; Ramya Kapadia; Jesse Huddleston and the CityWell United Methodist Church Music Team; Raleigh/Cary Community Chevra Kadisha including Bonnie Leach, Elyse Goldberg-Werner, Maryanne Klein, and Rachel Strauss; Kyle Sullivan - audio and video; Courtney Evans - fabrication; Alex Sauser-Monnig - fabrication