River Tangle Sound Installation
2026 / Eureka, CA
Produced and Displayed at Creekside Art Residency
Collaboration between BLUE NAGA & CARISSA CLARK
Salvaged redwood, cyanotype- and river-dyed canvas, found objects, field recordings, river tangles
River tangles are indicators and archives of winter’s high water—they are the dense plant matter that catches in branches, held together by water pressure and silt––each one tells a story specific to its place. The river Baduwa’t’s flow, form, and composition are shaped by the history and ongoing practices of genocidal displacement and extractive industries. The seven gravel mining companies along the river, from Blue Lake to the mouth, sculpt the geomorphology of the river that provides municipal drinking water to the majority of Humboldt County’s residents. Our bodies contain this river, and our climate grief is felt in the effects of drought, flooding, harmful algal blooms, and industrial impacts.
The installation invites the audience to observe the sculptural, fragile river tangles while they listen to the soundboxes, which hold looping soundtracks composed from the sounds found by the river, mining equipment, and memories of Baduwa’t from Creekside members.
A length of canvas stretches across the space, which was washed in the river, dyed with cyanotyped river objects, and stained with river silt, algae, charcoal, berries, and flowers found by the river. Visitors are invited to a river tangle-covered metal spiral by weaving in cyanotype fragments and blue threads while reflecting on your relationship with the Baduwa’t river—how it nourishes life for so many species, including us, and what we might stand to lose if we do not attend to the river with care.
A non-anthropomorphic point of view.
At the heart of the project lies the research inquiry into how we can use art to shift our relationship with more-than-human kin into one of respect. How do we make art that collaborates directly with non-human kin rather than through an anthropocentric framework? By putting the river at the center, displaying her creations, and layering field recordings from the Baduwa't, the River Tangle Sound Installation becomes a direct collaboration with the river, asking the audience to engage actively with the natural world.