3. P: “Mapping” is a recurring process in your work, present both in your artworks, and Archi Contemplatives workshops, as well as in your postdoctoral research exploring historical maps. How do your artworks evolve within this process, and in what ways does your research influence your artistic expression?
V: Within the frame of the Archi Contemplatives workshops, I mainly worked with people from different countries, most of them visually sensitive: architects, artists, urban designers, textile artists, or geographers. We worked with urban storytelling, experimented with implementing embodied knowledge into design projects. Maps worked as a means of self-investigation. We were mapping what we remember from walks, mapping how we organise design decisions, mapping how we make sense of the creative process. Maps served as a continuous zooming in and out of the creative process. They were modalities of reflective understanding of one’s own practice, from a fresh perspective.
Within the frame of the two projects I have been working on so far as a postdoctoral researcher, “Creativity and Well-Being” and “Mapping Environmental Crises Through the Lenses of Myths and Sciences”, at the Aalto Visual Communications Design Group, we were mainly interested in how people who are not necessarily visual persons make sense of the world, by mapping it between drawings and words. In our workshops, we are trying to understand what becomes meaningful enough to a person, meaningful enough so that she or he puts that entity or experience on a drawing. We are explicit that the drawings do not need to be beautiful in the traditional sense. We ask people to imagine they are writing a visual letter to a beloved one. Then, they take the task more seriously in an emotional context, and in a more relaxed way in the technical sense: they stop caring how it looks like when they realize the people around them are more interested to hear their story, rather than their technical skills in drawing. We have just published a paper on one of the workshops, you can read the full piece here.
I think mapping is one of the most essentials processes in my life. Mapping emotions, mapping words, mapping verses, mapping processes, mapping plans, mapping past adventures, mapping walks, mapping heroes, mapping books. Facilitating a workshop, teaching or mapping on my own: these are all different modalities of finding and sharing myself with the world and with others, encountering meaningful others and sharing with them what I find most essential to me in the particular moment. This is when I feel most alive, and most grateful for being alive.