The European project CoVision comes to fruition with “Confluence”, an audiovisual work led by the Czech Signal Festival that takes as its starting point the confluence of the Morava and Dyje rivers, home to the largest floodplain forest in Europe. Within this fragile territory, shaped by natural processes, environmental memory and human intervention, the collective formed by Marie Tučková, Katarina Gryvul, David Přílučík and the duo Selmeci Kocka Jusko offers a poetic reflection on ways of living alongside the landscape. Between infrastructure, ecological restoration and constant transformation, the work observes how landscapes accumulate wounds, provisional balances and possibilities for the future.
Marie Tučková, Katarina Gryvul, David Přílučík and Selmeci Kocka Jusko
Coming from fields as diverse as composition, performance, visual arts, installation and sound practice, Marie Tučková, Katarina Gryvul, David Přílučík and the duo Selmeci Kocka Jusko share a common interest in the relationships between landscape, memory, perception and transformation. Their work explores themes related to listening, post-natural conditions, contemporary ecologies and the ways humans coexist with the more-than-human world, combining voice, image, objects, space and sound to create immersive experiences that move between research, fiction and contemplation.
CoVision is a European project that brings together artists, scientists and local communities to explore new ways of looking at transforming ecosystems. Situated at the intersection of art, nature and digital innovation, it supports research and creative processes that make visible the relationships, species and changes that often remain outside conventional narratives.
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