Eloise Hawser - By the Deep, By the Mark by Eloise HawserSomerset House
Taking Somerset House’s close relationship with the River Thames and Victoria Embankment as its starting point, By the deep, by the mark plunges us into the hidden networks of liquid flow within our bodies and below the city.
Eloise Hawser by Eloise HawserSomerset House
The exhibition invited visitors on a journey through a three dimensional mind-map of sculptures, audiovisual displays, medical hardware and archival materials. Featuring maps, models and measurements of the River Thames alongside cutting-edge diagnostic ‘phantoms’ (specialist machines rarely seen outside of a hospital or laboratory which are used to calibrate medical imaging equipment and analyse fluid dynamics within the body), it drew parallels between extraordinary feats of civil engineering and the intricate inner workings of the human body, suggesting a correlation between revolutionary urban and medical innovations in the way they measure, process and predict mysterious natural and bodily phenomena.
Eloise Hawser by Eloise HawserSomerset House
Eloise Hawser by Eloise HawserSomerset House
Looking to the past and future sewage systems that keep London clean and its population healthy, Hawser charts attempts throughout the ages to reclaim the Thames as a space for leisure, rather than industry, from Joseph Bazalgette’s 19th century sewer system to the Thames Tideway ‘Super Sewer’ project.
Eloise Hawser by Eloise HawserSomerset House
Pointing to our fear of pollution and disease and the lengths we go to protect ourselves, Hawser seeks to reveal emotional resonances within the, often overlooked, infrastructures that underpin modern life.
Eloise Hawser by Eloise HawserSomerset House
Eloise Hawser by Eloise HawserSomerset House
The work in the exhibition was the result of nearly two years of research and artistic production whilst in residence onsite and offers a unique insight into Hawser’s creative practice.