Sunday, 18 November 2018

Many Years Ago,

I got a lot of pleasure from SCUBA diving,


 and even became a qualified Divemaster, so it was with great interest that I looked at British artist Sue Austin, who creates multimedia, performance, and installation art, using her wheelchair to go SCUBA as a means to explore new patterns of movement,

 in 2012, Austin was commissioned to create a series of multimedia events as part of that year’s Cultural Olympiad, in conjunction with the 2012 Olympics and Paralympics, the result, titled “Creating the Spectacle!” is a spectacular immersive dance performance and underwater exploration, which was shot near Shark el Sheik, Egypt by Norman Lomax of Moving Content

 Her underwater wheelchair is adapted from a standard-issue National Health Service chair, with battery powered propellers and perspex aerofoils to control turns, Austin hopes that the adaptations will be more widely available at diving centers in the future to make diving more inclusive,

 a statement on her website explains, “she aims to find dramatic and powerful ways to re-position disability and Disability Arts as the ‘Hidden Secret’. She argues that this ‘secret’, if explored, valued and then shared, can act to heal the divisions created in the social psyche by cultural dichotomies that define the ‘disabled’ as ‘other’.”

Austin first performed with her underwater wheelchair in Dorset, U.K. in 2012, and has since performed, shown films, and spoken around the world about her art practice, You can learn more about Austin and her organization Freewheeling, on her website, and watch her TED Talk here,

the video above with music is enchanting to watch, a lesson that no matter what, if there is a will there is a way.


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