The Chorography of Place: Mapping new ecologies of landscape, memory, history and visual culture

Peter Heylyn’s Cosmography in Four Books: Containing the Chorography & History of the whole World, and all the Principal Kingdoms, Provinces, Seas, and Isles Thereof. London: Philip Chetwind, 1670.

School of Design – Art and Design (practice-based) PhD 2023, Place-based and site responsive practice research

Aims and Objectives:

This PhD by practice aims to explore chorography’s relevance as an organising principle in contemporary artistic practice and critically address the historic yet neglected role of chorography in the documentation of place. Pertinent to research across diverse academic disciplines this proposal is timely, relevant, and contemporaneous. Chorography, or place writing, is the artistic representation of a regional map which originated in Classical Geography (c.149AD). This field-based approach and detailed descriptor of place takes region as its lens and qualitatively maps characteristics of the locale by examining the constituent parts of that place. If a sensory physical mapping of place occurs prior to representation where is the body in the process of chorography?. A particular focus of this research is to distinguish the performance of chorography from its documentation and re-presentation. Although a historic understanding is necessary this research recognises the body is itself a site of historical crossing that both transcends and incorporates these boundaries made possible by the very nature of its mobility, which has implications for who, what and how people and places are re-membered and re-presented. A critical reflection and practical exploration must recognise these relations do not occur in isolation but ‘in situ’ and within a context that affects how they are critically, ideologically, philosophically and historically situated.

Currently there is a renewed methodological interest and broadly conceived place relations in chorography within Cultural Studies, Archaeology and Performance. These forms of chorography, whilst practically and theoretically rooted in various strands of its developmental history, reflect its methodological richness and interdisciplinary nature although they do not have a locus as yet aligned. Therefore there is a need to analyse and synthesise these discrete bodies of knowledge that reflect current cultural pre-occupations with chorography to provide a clearer understanding of the relevance, meaning and impact of chorography today. I therefore propose the following outcomes:

  • Critically evaluate and determine chorography’s relevance and its application as a methodological tool in contemporary artistic practice and research.
  • Create new criteria to examine practices of place making by restoring, developing and communicating a connection between chorography past and present.
  • Assess and synthesise discrete bodies of knowledge from diverse spheres of theory and practice that reflect current cultural pre-occupations and a renewed interest in chorography’s application and theorisation.
  • Theorise chorography beyond its original conception, draw conclusions and propose future orientations, applications and developments

Relevance to Professional or Academic Field/Literature Review:

Selected practitioners and researchers of relevance to this study include Michael Shanks, Archaeologist, Stanford, Mike Pearson, formerly Performance Studies, Aberystwyth and visual theorist Clifford McLucas. Their work Theatre/Archaeology (2001) creates a porous space whereby archaeological and performance theory combine to provide an architecture for the event whose underlying questions was the representation of place and event and the role of landscape within it.Their concept of Deep Mapping (after William Heat Least-Moon) is derived from chorography.

This concept of the Deep Map echoes the concept of ‘thick description’ employed in ethnographic research (Geertz pace Ryle 1973). They are using the genre as a means to create techniques and re-think approaches to communities, locales and events. Their work incorporates chorography into performance and archaeology to activate, re-activate, question, examine and perform the histories of place utilising a range of methodological, archaeological, performance and narrative techniques including biography, memoir, folklore, topography to juxtapose and interpenetrate the historical and the contemporary.

Pearson’s exercise in deep mapping (2007) is a complex intertextual topography and biographical derivé incorporating region, locale, chorography, landscape, memory, archaeology and performance where historical, social, cultural and environmental temporalities are foregrounded. The scholarly work of Darrell J. Rohl, Archaeologist, Durham University, whose research is organised around past, present, people and place, identifies chorographic methods in archaeological fieldwork and interpretation (2012). Nicoletta Isar, Cultural Studies, Copenhagen University (2009) explores chorography and the performative relation between space and movement. This has largely been conceived under Dr A. Lidov’s neologism Hierotopy (2002), the organisation and mediation of sacred spaces, a transdisciplinary approach combining art history, archaeology and cultural anthropology. Poetic and philosophical connections can be traced in Kristeva (1984) and Derrida (1995).Prior research on this topic has been informed by geographer Inger Birkeland’s theory of chorography as an act of journeying, a socially narrated identity and material embodiment of place (2005).

How will your proposed research fit into the existing body of academic knowledge and practice in the professional field?

Shanks and Witmore (2010) identify common components of Antiquarianism in chorography including local and national history, geography, the regional, examination of archaeological remains and the act of collecting. Although chorography is pre-disciplinary they claim a genetic link forms the basis of contemporary disciplinary approaches across heritage management, tourism, archaeology, historical geography and contemporary arts practice. Although these claims are not substantiated they argue for a genealogical understanding of inter or trans-disciplinary practices concerned with relations of land, place, memory and locational identity to provide an enhanced understanding of present disciplinary, practical and academic positions. It is this link that I am trying to pick up and establish in contemporary artistic practice and research.

What are the expected outcomes for artistic practice and how does this contribute to the research?

Utilising chorography as an organising principle in artistic practice I aim to realise a historically grounded exploration of place by performing and documenting embodied, visual, textual and symbolic mappings through strategies such as image and text, narrative, the intimate and fact and fiction. These mappings will form the basis of artworks, critical and performance writing, book works, performance and installation which will translate chorographic methods and the physical act of mapping into artistic practice. As direct address to the questions posed theoretical concerns would be embedded in concrete action signifying an intention to fold the critical into the personal, the political into the poetic, the sensual into the discursive and the performative into the rhetorical. This research will create new criteria with which to examine and re-interpret contemporary practices of place making by retrieving, restoring, developing and recreating a connection between chorography past and present. Combining historic method with contemporaneous form will enable a renewed understanding of the chorography of place not just artistically but physically, contextually and historically.

How will your research enhance knowledge or contribute to new understandings of the subject?

Prior studies framed within visual arts do not adequately recuperate the concept, and its pertinence to the theorisation, contextualisation and politicisation of performative embodied tactics and spatial practices ‘space is a practised place’ (De Certeau 1984), O’Sullivan, Jill (2011) The chorographic vision: an investigation into the historical and contemporary visual literacy of chorography, PhD thesis, James Cook University (AU). This study traces the history and symbolism of chorography as a visual literacy of place through cartography and the graphic medium of print, privileging the map as the primary visual signifier of chorography. Although the study does acknowledge other forms of chorographic practice its principle aim is to map the development of historical chorography and the philosophical discourse on place whereby the practice based iterations reproduce historic practice without providing new applications or forms.  It is these other forms of chorographic practice that depart from its historical nature that provide what I perceive to be chorography’s as yet unexplored methodological richness in artistic research and the layering of these historical crossings that connect the cultural and socio-political to the personal.

I argue that if the relations posited within chorography are firstly empirical, experiential and emplaced it cannot be fully articulated by focussing on the cartographic. Put simply the medium is not the method. There is a need to distinguish this act from its documentation and re-presentation to provide new theories, forms and applications by addressing the political implications of the embodied in the act of representation. To provide a contemporaneous account the performative relations between the body, mapping and place; the mobile, embodied and situated are therefore central to a contemporary interpretation of chorography (Butler 2011).

I therefore propose the following research questions:

  • How can we perform the relations between public memory and personal narratives of cultural identity and belonging through the medium of place?
  • What is the significance of visual, textual, artefactual and embodied experiences of place in constructing and mediating personal narratives of cultural identity and belonging and how can we perform their retrieval, survival, communication and recreation?
  • If a sensory physical mapping of place occurs prior to representation where is the body in the process of chorography and how do we address the political implications of the embodied in the act of representation?
  • How is the subject situated rhetorically amongst the cultural, factual, historical details and how might the subject be figured as a marginal detail of another narrative?
  • Can the concept of physical liminality be transposed into the field of aesthetics and if so how?

Research Approaches: What methods do you intend to use to deliver your aims & objectives?

Case Studies:

Providing the scope and context to explore an independent chorographic research practice sites chosen for their cultural, historic, national, symbolic and mythological significance include Brontë Country which straddles West Yorkshire and the East Lancashire Pennines. Located to the west of the Bradford- Leeds conurbation, Kirklees and Calderdale. this landscape in Wuthering Heights is a continual and active shaping presence. Other sites include the Devil’s Bridge and St. Michael’s Mount, Cornwall. Interest in these sites has developed out of prior practice.

The former located in Aberystwyth, Wales consists of 3 bridges built on top of each other, the first bridge is dated circa. 11th century forming part of a pilgrimage route associated with the Monks at the nearby Strata Florida Abbey. The nearby Hafod Estate is managed by the National Trust. The symbolic site of pilgrimage St. Michaels Mount shares a deep verisimilitude with Mont St. Michel, Normandy, France. This island has a complex identity as spiritual centre, military stronghold, harbour and home which is related in mythology to 3 other locations in the UK connected by a singular narrative arc. This site is also managed by the National Trust. Conceivably one of these identified case studies, or an aspect of, could occupy the entire duration of the PhD.

Methods:

Chorography is a field based qualitative research method with a range of techniques to capture, map and re-present place as currently utilised in archaeological fieldwork and interpretation. Prior research has revealed how this approach might be applied in artistic practice however it does not account for the body in the field. To address this I propose a form of Ethnography classified as Composition Studies, Critical Ethnography is a “research practice, primarily related to education, whose purpose is to use a dialogue about a cultural context to develop critical action” whilst considering “the ethics and politics of representation in that practice and reporting of that dialogue and resulting actions.” (Brook and Hogg quoted in Gilbert Brown S and Dobrin, Sidney I, 2004:4). In this instance Chorography is that context. I would seek to combine this with Cultural Mapping as cultural enquiry, a mode of inquiry and a methodological tool that makes visible the ways local stories, practices, relationships, memories, and rituals constitute places as meaningful locations.

Image reproduced from https://www.oldworldauctions.com/catalog/lot/110/6 (accessed 26/04/23)

The Chorography of Place: Mapping new ecologies of landscape, history and visual culture.

What follows is an abridged and long unfulfilled PhD proposal that was successfully submitted to the Critical Writing department at the Royal College of Art as well as Coventry University and remains unrealised due to personal and financial circumstances. I am now in a position to conduct this research independently and plan to embark on it over the coming weeks.

Darrell J.Rohl Chorography tag cloud

1.0 Abstract

To my knowledge this is the first PhD by practice in the UK to explore Chorography’s relevance as a methodological tool in contemporary artistic practice and critically address the historic yet neglected role of Chorography in the documentation of place. Pertinent to research across diverse academic disciplines this proposal is timely, relevant, and contemporaneous. Historically chorography, or place writing, is the artistic representation of a regional map which originated in Classical Geography (Ptolemy c.149AD). This field-based approach and detailed descriptor of place qualitatively maps characteristics of the locale by examining the constituent parts of that place. Currently there is a renewed methodological interest in chorography within Cultural Studies, Archaeology and Performance. These forms of chorography whilst practically and theoretically rooted in various strands of its developmental history, reflect its methodological richness and interdisciplinary nature although they do not have a locus as yet aligned. Therefore there is a need to analyse and synthesise these discrete bodies of knowledge that reflect current cultural pre-occupations with chorography to provide a clearer understanding of the relevance, meaning and impact of chorography today.

This research aims to provide a rigorous examination of chorography as a methodological tool which takes region as its lens and address it as a mode of mediating specific forms of cultural memory, narrative and belonging. This also includes asking how chorography can figuratively, metaphorically or symbolically excavate the hidden, the forgotten or the overlooked to reveal and re-present micro-histories, landscape narratives, texts, images, archives and collections either discarded or forgotten. Although a historic understanding is necessary this research recognises the chorographer’s body is also a site of historical crossing that both transcends and incorporates these boundaries made possible by the very nature of its mobility, which has implications for who, what and how people and places are remembered and re-presented.

As history, theory, artistic research and practice are increasingly complex and intertwined with bodies of knowledge from diverse spheres of scholarship and disciplinary boundaries become increasingly diffuse this ultimately raises the question of location. Combining tradition with innovation to position artistic research skills within the historically grounded yet expanded field of chorography I aim to actively engage this question in order to devise a new form and application of critical enquiry. Utilising chorography as a methodological framework in artistic practice will create new criteria with which to examine and re-interpret contemporary practices of place making by retrieving, restoring, developing and recreating a connection between chorography past and present. Combining historic method with contemporaneous form will enable a renewed understanding of the chorography of place not just artistically but contextually, historically and physically.

2.0 Research Context: Chorography

Chorography designates “a regional map in Renaissance geographic texts and the artistic description of regions” viewed and experienced from within linking “regional events at the time of occurrence in pictorial representations.” (Olwig 2001 and Curry 2005 cited in Päivi Kymäläinen and Ari A. Lehtinen 2010: 252). Chorography, defined by the polymath Ptolemy in the Geographike Hyphegesis (c.149AD) takes region as its lens. This field-based approach and detailed descriptor of place qualititively maps characteristics of the locale by examining the constituent parts of that place “to describe the smallest details of places.” Morra J, Smith M (2006: 17-18).

Chorography was re-discovered in Renaissance Geography and British Antiquarianism 16th -17th centuries. Historically William Camden’s Brittania (1586) or a Chorographicall Description of the most flourishing Kingdomes, England, Scotland, and Ireland is an encyclopaedic approach to a geographic, historical topographical survey of the British Isles which has been identified as a classic exemplar of the renaissance of a chorographic work “connecting past and present through the medium of space, land, region or country.” (Rohl 2012 2011). Cormack states “Chorography was the most wide ranging of the geographical sub disciplines since it included an interest in genealogy, chronology and antiquities, as well as local history and topography…uniting an anecdotal interest in local families and […] genealogical and chronological research.” (Cormack 1991 cited in Rohl 2012:22). British Antiquarianism therefore retrieved chorography and recreated it in an expanded field, re-interpreting its legacy, ensuring its survival, restoration and continuing communication. Susan Stewart discusses the antiquarian as being “moved by a nostalgia of origin and presence” whose “function is to validate the culture of ground.” (1984:153)

Currently there is a renewed methodological interest in chorography and broadly conceived place relations within Cultural Studies, Archaeology and Performance. There is therefore a need to assess, address and synthesise these discrete bodies of knowledge from diverse spheres of scholarship, theory and practice. Currently conducted independently of each other they nevertheless reflect current cultural pre-occupations with the concept, its application and theorisation. Selected practitioners and researchers of relevance to this study include Michael Shanks, Archaeologist, Stanford and Mike Pearson, Performance Studies, Aberystwyth. Their work Theatre/Archaeology (2001) creates a porous space whereby archaeological and performance theory combine to provide an architecture for the event “whose underlying questions was the representation of place and event” and the role of landscape within it (Shanks). Their concept of Deep Mapping is derived from chorography. They borrow the term from William Least Heat-Moon’s PrairyErth, an intensive look at a particular place that included discussion of geography, history, and ecology, that place being Chase County, Kansas. Pearson and Shanks were using the genre as a means to create techniques and re-think approaches to communities, locales and events. Their work incorporates chorography into performance and archaeology to activate, re-activate, question, examine and perform the histories of place utilising a range of methodological, archaeological, performance and narrative techniques including biography, memoir, folklore, topography to “juxtapose and interpenetrate the historical and the contemporary.” Pearson’s exercise in deep mapping (2007) is a complex intertextual topography and biographical derivé incorporating region, locale, chorography, landscape, memory, archaeology and performance “where historical, social, cultural and environmental temporalities are foregrounded.”

The scholarly work of Darrell J. Rohl, Archaeologist, Durham University, whose research is organised around past, present, people and place, identifies chorographic methods in archaeological fieldwork and interpretation (2012). Nicoletta Isar, Cultural Studies, Copenhagen University (2009) explores chorography and the performative relation between space and movement. This has largely been conceived under Dr A. Lidov’s neologism Hierotopy 2002, the organisation and mediation of sacred spaces, a transdisciplinary approach combining art history, archaeology and cultural anthropology.

3.0 Original Contribution to knowledge

Recent studies framed within visual arts do not adequately recuperate the concept, and its pertinence to the theorisation, contextualisation and politicisation of performative embodied tactics and spatial practices ‘space is a practised place.’(De Certeau 1984), O’Sullivan, Jill (2011) The chorographic vision: an investigation into the historical and contemporary visual literacy of chorography, PhD thesis, James Cook University (AU). This study traces the history and symbolism of chorography as a visual literacy of place through cartography and the graphic medium of print, privileging the map as the primary visual signifier of chorography. Although the study does acknowledge other forms of chorographic practice its principle aim is to map the development of historical chorography and the philosophical discourse on place whereby the practice based iterations reproduce historic practice without providing new applications or forms. It is these other forms of chorographic practice that depart from its historical nature that provide what I perceive to be chorography’s as yet unexplored methodological richness in artistic research and the layering of these historical crossings that connect the cultural and socio-political to the personal.

I argue as original contribution to knowledge if the relations posited within chorography are firstly empirical, experiential and emplaced it cannot be fully articulated by focussing on the cartographic. Put simply the medium is not the method. This authoritarian disembodied cartographic vision and static pictorial symbol or ‘image’ of place elides the textures of place and its complex network of relations i.e. the embodied, symbolic, socio-political, cultural, familial, contextual, discursive & historical which contribute to and profoundly affect how autobiographical identity is constructed, mediated, narrated, re-membered and situated. This research recognises that chorographic method is the trace of an embodied agent already implicated into the textures of place and that the physical act of mapped place is not synonymous with the map as object. Although a historic understanding is necessary this research recognises the body is itself a site of historical crossing that both transcends and incorporates these boundaries made possible by the very nature of its mobility. Historically chorography does not account for the body in the field yet a sensory physical mapping of place occurs prior to the act of representation.

There is a need to distinguish this act from its documentation and re-presentation to provide new theories, forms and applications by addressing the political implications of the embodied in the act of representation. To provide a contemporaneous account the performative relations between the body, mapping and place; the mobile, embodied and situated are therefore central to a contemporary interpretation of chorography. Historically there are no female chorographers and therefore no theoretical address on chorography that recognises the philosophical discourse on sexual difference and place from a feminine perspective in visual art. This research aims to address this lack.

The following research outcomes will provide a clearer understanding of the relevance, meaning and impact of chorography today.

  • Critically evaluate and determine chorography’s relevance and its application as a methodological tool that constructs and mediates specific forms of cultural memory, narrative and belonging and locate this in contemporary artistic research, theory and practice.
  • Create new criteria to examine practices of place making by retrieving, restoring, developing and communicating a connection between chorography past and present.
  • Assess and synthesise discrete bodies of knowledge from diverse spheres of scholarship, theory and practice. Conducted independently of each other they nevertheless reflect current cultural pre-occupations and a renewed interest in chorography.
  • Theorise chorography beyond its original conception, draw conclusions and propose future orientations, applications and developments.

4.0 Personal Statement & Objectives 

The desire to recuperate the historic yet neglected method of chorography in artistic research is philosophically rooted in my practice. Engaging with different conceptions of sites as markers of place via a curatorial approach is to actively ‘take care’ in the restoration, conservation and curation of micro-histories, narratives, texts, images, archives and collections either discarded or forgotten. During this process a historical figure, site, place, event or voice or voices are adopted to activate the work and produce a narrative arc. There is a desire to retrieve and recreate those figures in a present context and reopen a dialogue that is directed back toward its own context, boundaries and form.  This displays a sensitivity to the re-presentation of material employed and a continually recurring hinge is the problematic interface between the public and the private. This problematic in some respects undermines the desire to protect as this act re-stages, re-articulates, re-presents and re-mediates what I term the performance of the private, the entry of the private domain into the public arena where it is both commodified and incorporated into the rhetoric of display. The concepts operative in the work and research and are critically examined through diverse yet interconnected bodies of knowledge. I understand this to represent a chorographic approach and pre-disposition to the concept of chorography.

Art, whilst innovative, can use archaeological method or historiographic accounts to excavate and recontextualise our relations to the past. Legacy, whilst not always visible is present. Therefore a critical reflection must recognise these relations do not occur in isolation but ‘in situ’ and within a context that affects how they are critically, ideologically, philosophically and historically situated. Applying existing artistic skills in a new field will enable the development of a more comprehensive understanding of place, not just artistically, but historically, physically and contextually.             

Between being and becoming

negative space

Negative Space © Denise Startin

‘As Stuart Hall reminds us, identity is a matter of becoming as well as being:

It belongs to the future as much as to the past. It is not something which already exists, transcending place, time history and culture. Cultural identities come from somewhere, have histories. But, like everything that is historical, they undergo constant transformation. Far from being eternally fixed in some essentialised past, they are subject to the continous ‘play’ of history, culture and power. Far from being grounded in a mere ‘recovery’  of the past, which is waiting to be found, and which, when found, will secure our sense of ourselves into eternity, identities are the names we give to the different ways we are positioned by, and position ourselves within, the narratives of the past.’

Geoffrey Batchen, Each Wild Idea, Writing, Photography, History, The MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, London, England: 2001, pp.79