"Dwell Within": Order and Chaos by Alyssa Coffin

The river pulses; in places, churning against itself. It swivels unceremoniously over rocks, bending its body for swift and intimate passage.

This piece emerged from a curiosity about the irregular patterns of river’s current and what it might feel like to surrender my body to its pathways.

So much of the modern world is ordered; explored territory with predictable structure and measurable results. This order aids us in moving closer to the objects of our desire, securely and comfortably.

Nature, though governed by laws that we can examine, remains vastly unknown and unpredictable. The river represents this un-linear thrust of chaos – water churning and swirling in all directions, serpentining like a vein through the crust of the earth.

What might happen if I let go of control (the security of the riverbank) and surrendered my ability to direct my own path down the river? Where might I be carried that I could not get to with oars or a motor forging a linear route?

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I began by considering what materials were closely connected with the river that I might use to create a structure to carry me.

Rivercane is a native species in the bamboo family in that grows along riverbanks. Native Americans in Appalachia have used the plant extensively. I learned to soak, split, rig, lash and weave the cane to make a basket in the shape of my body. This was a tedious process and a sharp learning curve. The repetitive task of using my hands to transform this material intimately acquainted me its properties– the smooth, hard skin; the way it turns from green to brown over time; its tendencies when splitting; its irregularity at each node; how its size color and the distance between nodes indicates its age.

(Learn more about rivercane here: https://appvoices.org/2001/06/01/2971/)

Laboring with my bare hands to transform the rivercane became an act of loving attention, forging a relationship with the plant. Crawling into the rivercane basket and releasing my weight into its form was an entrusting of the vulnerability of my body into this artifact of cultivated relationship. And in a way, this relationship extended to the ecosystem of the land surrounding the river.

I used rivercane’s larger, invasive cousin, bamboo, to create a raft. I gathered it from a nearby neighborhood and lashed it together in layers. The structure of the raft upheld the basket and sustained my weight in the water. It also served as a barrier between the vulnerability of my body and the rocks along the river.

The contrast of the random weave of the rivercane basket and the rigid, regular pattern of the bamboo raft, displays this tension of order and chaos. The contrast mirrors the human-built ecosystem of the ordered city and the wild unknown of the natural environment. Both are Nature and both are necessary for our survival as relational beings. Where we perhaps become misaligned is by making the city our center and trying to eradicate unpredictability with walls. In reality, the chaos of Nature is the core, the Source from which all else is built and it is the permeating vast mystery of our world.

It is in the space between order and chaos that we are called to move through the world. We must have the structures of order to tether and protect us, but we must also be willing to move out into the chaos of the unknown, to let curiosity lead us along unexpected pathways. If we do not, our frame will become rigid and we won’t be able to adapt and learn through the inevitable change and suffering of life. Surrendering into chaos allows us to be expanded by the potentiality all around and within us.

It is with this mindset that I lowered the raft into the water, curled up into the basket and untied the rope.

What I did not anticipate was, well, the unexpected. I knew to prepare myself for being whipped about by the irregular currents, but I did not know that having two friends follow me in a canoe to capture video footage would prove so difficult or that the current would be nearly completely dead at certain points. It ended up being a series of unfortunate events that disrupted my romanticized idea of experiencing a long meandering journey drifting down a river. The drone battery died before my friend could lock in on me, the second camera got dunked when my friend slipped and fell out of the boat, and most of my journey I had to be towed by the canoe– a naked, half shivering, half sunbaked, helpless passenger. After 5 hours on the river, I had only about 2 minutes of usable footage to testify to my artistic vision.

The moments during my river journey when I was able to release myself to the unpredictable gestures of the river, were ones of extreme disorientation. I was completely unmoored, turned around by the current so many times that I no longer had any point of reference. The direction of my “front facing” was never long aligned with the direction of my movement. When I looked up from my fetal position all I could see was swirling trees and sky, my visual experience of these elements mirrored by the rhythm of the river’s current – swift pivoting or unhurried spinning. It was an ineffable sensation that penetrated my mind, body and spirit.

We often fail to recognize that what is novel and of value often lies in places only accessed by being disoriented and traveling an un-linear path. We think order and asserting control can get us to a point in the flow of time where we think the object of our desire lies. We deem progress to be along the most efficient and expedited path.

The title of the piece, Dwell Within, suggests a re-entering of the womb, becoming infantile – helpless and exposed. This means acknowledging our own ignorance and honoring the mystery of existence. Offering my bare skin in the fetal position represents this posturing of submission to the dark waters of the womb. Cradled in the organic and disordered weave of the rivercane basket, and half submerged in the chaotic water of the river, my body became a physical witness to what it means to dwell in this place of unpredictable potentiality.

 Dwell Within begs the question– within what? And this is precisely where I want to leave the viewer.

Do we dwell within the making of our own hands – the structure we build up around ourselves to securely and efficiently deliver our bodies to new shorelines?

Do we dwell within an unseen womb of protection born of a relationship of trust? Do we journey into chaos to let the harsh, unpredictable realities of life grow us and keep us malleable so that we might yield like water around rocks?

Do we surrender to the Divine pulse and align ourselves with Nature’s rhythms to carry us to places we could not plan or imagine?

VIEW THE FULL VIDEO HERE

Ecotone by Alyssa Coffin

Last weekend I participated in Art in the Woods, an outdoor exhibition in Cosby, TN. I camped out in a really cute tiny cabin for a couple days and made this piece on site. It was such a wonderful experience to get to respond to the land directly and then, during the opening, engage people from the surrounding area. What began as a simple installation of branches and stone, evolved into a performative installation that invited audience participation.

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Ecotone

Beech branches from Kodak, TN, cotton thread died with blood root from creek bank, ground red iron oxide stones from creek

An ecotone is a transition area between two biological communities where they meet and integrate. In this piece, I gathered Beech tree branches from my trails in Kodak, TN and grafted them to the Ironwood branches overhanging the creek here in Cosby. In this way, I extended the ecotone of the forest to the creek and integrated the branches from one biological community into the ecosystem of a different forest. The reaching branches from opposing banks meet over the circle of stones built up from the creek.

I hold a red basin full of ground up iron oxide stones from the creek. I invite the viewer, you, to step out of the “picture frame,” become a participant in the ecotone and return to the river what has been taken from it.

To participate: Dip your hands in the basin, as you do so, hold eye contact with me for as long as you wish. Then journey to wash your hands in the stone circle where the branches meet. Consider meditating on something you’d like to release, someone to forgive or use this moment in time to steep in the silence.

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After over a year of social distancing, it was a powerful experience to facilitate a ritual that invited eye contact and a washing of hands that wasn’t for the purpose of vanquishing an invisible enemy.

A Walk (when asked to focus on the ground) by Alyssa Coffin

I release my feet bare.

                                     As I walk, the sensations of the grass prickle my feet.

The ground under them feels oddly far away.

I channel my concentration on the ground underneath my body, all that is below the immediacy of domineering eyes and hands curious and grasping. An internal resistance rises up in me, denying my feet the task of leading. There is a distrust because feet can’t feel as much, there are less nerve endings to pick up all the nuanced textures.

 The morning ground is cold and damp. Some of my toes go white with loss of circulation. I relinquish my dominate capacities for accessing my environment and resign to letting my feet to be the “head” and direct my walk.

 Okay feet, go where you please.

When a texture elicits their curiosity, like the soft wood of a rotten tree across the path, I stroke it with my toes. I even pet the prickly leaves of a bull thistle. Further, into field, I burrow my foot into dead grasses and then comb them between my toes. A delightful web of shadows tattoos my skin. I make my way slowly across the field, gently greeting a tiny flower, lifting its soft purple head with my big toe.

The ground makes itself known, that is it not my infinite traveling pad, but riveted with uncertainty. It is an infinite composition of tiny plants and variations of grass, thorns or stiff straw or hollowed stocks, that force me to walk very slowly, considering each step.

“ouch, ahh owwwwee”  “ouch, ouch, ouch”

The pain radiates up my entire body. Suddenly the rest of my body feels included in the experience. I realize giving the command to my feet didn’t mean the rest of my body was just passively along for the ride. Instead of the ground feeling distant, the ground is suddenly elevated. It rises to a higher place in my consciousness through the bottoms of my feet, asserting itself distinctly up into the rest of my body, all the way to the top of my head.

I stop and take a video – panning from my walking feet straight up to the sky over my head and over and over and then falling to back down to the ground upside down. Ground and sky remerge. There is no isolated experience. The atmosphere encircles the earth and all is held in one continuous circle.

Gravity causes the earth to collapse in on itself.

My walk has absolutely no destination and no plan for a timely return. The direction is determined by the shifting of my feet in their curiosity and desire for the most hospitable landing pads. I begin to learn which varieties of grass are plush carpets and which are laced with hidden thorns. I soon learn to recognize the colors of these various components to what would otherwise just be categorized in my mind as “field.”  

When I reach the end of the field and it’s time to turn back, I decide to crawl. I lower my limbs tentatively into the prickly grasses. With my eyes open, I witness the slow passing of detail- what a vast array minuscule landscape.  With my hands reaching to pull me forward, I am flooded with sensations. Yet, I keep looking up to see my progress and become seduced by light and shadows instead of the ground unanimated beneath my body.

Ugh, so far away, how long will it take me to get back?

I close my eyes. In the darkness, the under-land of my internal landscape, I rest into feeling. I place my hands and knees like a gangly creature stocking an unseen prey. The mechanics of my body are no longer the natural ease of walking on two feet. My wrists feel broken and unnatural, my core and upper body are working unusually hard. My weight compresses the ground, snaps stocks, presses down and tramples tender grasses. My usual mindlessness when I walk upright is affronted by this intimate mode of transportation. I become aware of the consequence of my desire to travel from point a to point b.

I feel odd, other-than-human, primal. The ground is elevated in my consciousness even further. My slow crawl connects me to the ground as source- where all that nourishes and sustains my body comes from.

Tread carefully, this is precious earth.

Gratitude surges up in me. With each awkward coordination of limbs, the intimacy and directness of my contact commands my attention. This ground feeds my being– not just my body by way of the garden near the house, but also my soul and mind, in the now of this embodied moment.

This ground, this is my partner in life.

The terrain begins to slope downwards. I notice the gravity pull on my hands as they reach blindly out and then sink to lower ground. I imagine myself a tiny figure crawling across the curvature of the earth, the full sphered planet.

If I keep crawling straight along my path I will end up back in the same spot I began.

There is no new or final destination.

*Thanks to Sophie Cabot and Vicky Vergou for coordinating this group walk on March 5th and the inspirational prompt to focus on the ground.

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