Letters to the Landscape 2025 – About

Letters to the Landscape 2025: Title Image

Letters to the Landscape is an epistolary dialogue and travelogue exploring the relations between Brontë Country and Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights (1847). The artist uses various strategies of production including polyphony, narrative, autobiography, fact and fiction and the intimate to interrogate authorship, authenticity, and the role of narrative and collections in shaping cultural memory. This cinematic essay incorporates postcards, letters, pinhole photography, digital photography, found images, found texts and Super 8. The script is non-linear and hangs together as a series of episodes or meditations and incorporates other writers and voices including J.G Ballard, René Daumal, actress Merle Oberon, Elizabeth Gaskell, Charlotte Bronte’s biographer and Emily Brontë to name a few. The work has been constructed and fabricated through the interaction of several pseudonyms who constitute the research team and the film crew, operating under the fictional artist duo Vale & Howlette. Adopting these dramatis personae in a broader narrative framework, Vale & Howlette become primary characters in a narrative that explores the performance of identity through ideas of place, history, travel, time and memory. This body of work is entitled The Chronicles of Vale & Howlette (2021 to date). The fictional artist duo Vale & Howlette interrogate authorship and authenticity, the work explores how identity, place, and memory are performed and constructed through a multi-media approach incorporating narrative, image, collections and the archive.

The work is initiated through a fictional conceit as the response to a ‘found’ collection of old photographic equipment (utilised in the film), personal letters and photographs and over 300 postcards of Brontë Country which are used both for the fieldwork and to punctuate the films episodic narrative. This series of episodes or meditations include episode 1: Epistles, a meditation on the epistolary and the act of letter writing, Episode 2: To Have and to Hold is a meditation on the collection and the act of collecting, Episode 3: A Reluctant Pilgrim is a meditation on the journey to Top Withins (reputed inspiration for Wuthering Heights, Emily Brontë, 1847). Episode 4: A Lovers Spat re-imagines and re-writes the relationship between the two main protagonists in Wuthering Heights, Cathy & Heathciff and Episode 5 is a personal meditation on the act of dying which also symbolically represents the death of the female protagonist, Cathy in Wuthering Heights and the death of Emily Brontë. By foregrounding the fictional personas of Vale & Howlette, the work invites audiences to question the boundaries between fact and fiction, artist and character, author and place. It invites reflection on how artistic practice can be used to question historical narratives and reimagine place-based storytelling through the act of collecting.

Still Image from film Introduction
Film still Postcard Fieldnote from Phyliss Dare, the pseudonymous fieldworker and scriptwriter to George Howlette, the pseudonymous Director

Walking

Across the world, walking is a vital way to assert one’s presence in public space and discourse. Walking maps the terrain of contemporary walking practices, foregrounding work by Black artists, Indigenous artists and artists of colour, working-class artists, LGBTQI+ artists, disabled artists and neurodiverse artists, as well as many more who are frequently denied the right to take their places in public space, not only in the street or the countryside, but also in art discourse. This anthology contends that, as a relational practice, walking inevitably touches upon questions of access, public space, land ownership, and use. Walking is, therefore, always a political act.

Artists surveyed include:
Stanley Brouwn, Laura Grace Ford, Regina Jose Galindo, Emily Hesse, Tehching Hsieh, Kongo Astronauts, Myriam Lefkowitz, Sharon Kivland, Andre Komatsu, Steve McQueen, Jade Montserrat, Sara Morawetz, Paulo Nazareth, Carmen Papalia, Ingrid Pollard, Issa Samb, Sop, Iman Tajik, Tentative Collective, Anna Zvyagintseva. Writers include: Jason Allen-Paisant, Tanya Barson, André Brasil, Amanda Cachia, Sarah Jane Cervenak, Annie Dillard, Jacques Derrida, Dwayne Donald, Darby English, Édouard Glissant, Steve Graby, Antje von Graevenitz, Stefano Harney and Fred Moten, Elise Misao Hunchuck, Kathleen Jamie, Carl Lavery, JeeYeun Lee, Michael Marder, Gabriella Nugent, Isobel Parker Philip, Rebecca Solnit.

Text and image reproduced from Amazon

Still from Episode 4 – A Lovers spat

Still you beckoned me with your availability, your parlour games, your desire to cater to every whim, the promise to fulfil any fantasy. Your body gorged my vision. Replete with the extent of you, I could never see the end of you, never see beyond you, never get outside you, never get inside you…yet…always the feeling of you moving inside me. And it clings, and it rings and the falling begins.