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MEETING THE LOUGH ON ITS OWN TERMS

A partnership with Friends of the EarthDigital Art StudiosSonic Arts Research Centre and PS² (Belfast),

and Banner Repeater (London) 

Ami Clarke

artist working with

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EXHIBITION PS2 GALLERY, BELFAST AUG-SEPT 2025

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pictures from the opening of

Meeting the Lough On Its Own Terms by Ami Clarke exhibited Aug-September 2025

at PS2 Gallery, Belfast

EXHIBITION BANNER REPEATER GALLERY, LONDON 2026

documentation: video capture of the work installed at Banner Repeater Feb - May 2026 

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installation photographs of Meeting the Lough On Its Own Terms at Banner Repeater, London.

 

Meeting The Lough On Its Own Terms brings a symbiotic approach to developing the Rights of Nature at Lough Neagh; a live ecocide, where the largest body of water in Ireland and the UK became overwhelmed by algae blooms, the complexity of which includes decades if not centuries of extractive forces and neglect. The story of evolutionary biologist Lynn Margulis’s work on microbial life reveals the ideological construction of world views that bring us to a state of systems collapse today, such as neoliberalism, predicated upon Neo-Darwinist concepts of competition and the selfish gene, with her emphasis on symbiotic life, collaborative processes, and the understanding that organisms emerge in synthesis with the environment.

The work draws upon a collective writing project and conversations over 2.5 years with Friends of the Earth NI and associates, druids, herbalists, campaigners, and eco-lawyers engaged with ancient Irish Brehon Law, to tell of the multiple stories running through the Lough from a decolonial, more-than-human, microbial perspective.

Follow the slurry, follow the money.

Once a site of great abundance, supplying (as it still does) 40% of all drinking water to NI, with eel fishing famously being passed down across generations over centuries, the complexity of how the Lough became eutrophic presents a textbook case in converging dynamics of power, influence, and conflicts of interest, that have also developed over decades, if not centuries, around Lough Neagh and the watershed. Whilst the work focuses on Lough Neagh, it speaks to much broader concerns regarding how environmental neglect affects both democratic processes, and public health, as neoliberal policies entangle with algae blooms.  The material emphasis on the nutrients in the lough, raises awareness, educates and empowers advocacy for more effective environmental regulations and democratic processes leading to establishing the Rights of Nature.

Systems Collapse

The focus on the microbial scale holds the potential to lead to a paradigm shift in thinking; a gut feeling, even, as humans recalibrate a relationship to nature from a de-centred multi-species perspective. The story of evolutionary biology unpacks the converging ideological world views that bring us to a state of systems collapse today, and how thinking in systems i.e. ‘ecological thinking’ is now vital for our very survival.

 

Sonic Ritual workshop and live jam.

Rituals have acted historically, as early technological interfaces, scoring human / nature relationships, in very particular ways. The work emphasises listening and sound, as practices that can de-centre the human, amongst the vulnerable ecologies of Lough Neagh and the watershed.  

 

The Sonic Ritual live jam performance brings together Clarke with John D’Arcy and HIVE choir, where performing live together proposes new ways of ‘being’ in the world ‘with other species’. Foregrounding considerations of how human voice/s in a polyphonic approach might sit within the delicate ensemble of a multi-species perspective, to reflect the new calibration we are hoping to bring about: a new symbiotic calibration of humans and nature, whilst furthering a paradigm shift to a microbial scale.

Algae blooms offer a symptom of the climate crisis that emphasises the interconnectedness of vulnerable ecosystems with human-made systems.

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MAKE KIN
NOT KINGS

'MAKE KIN NOT KINGS' - with reference to the feminist science fiction writer and theoretician Ursula K LeGuinn's famous quote: 'we live in capitalism'.

'MAKE KIN NOT KINGS' brings together Donna Haraway in synergy with Ursula K Le Guin, who’s salient quote about the divine right of kings seeming unchangeable, until it did… mirrors Lynn Margulis’ urgent demand that we move on from the Neo-Darwinist / Neoliberal ‘thought collective’ as she called it, that she encountered in resistance to her paper on symbiogenesis all those decades ago.  The underwater footage shows the dispersal of the algae blooms in the water column at Portlegnone 25.08.24. situated on the outskirts of Lough Neagh, Northern Ireland.  With thanks for assistance from Darragh Graham, and Navid Gornall.

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PRINTS/DIAGRAMS
MAPPING THE FLOWS OF POWER

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Follow the Slurry, Follow the Money

Lough Neagh Neoliberal diagram of slurry,

showing flows of power and pollution

TWO YEARS RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT
ALONGSIDE FRIENDS OF THE EARTH NI

Field Research

I was invited to join Friends of the Earth NI in the summer of 2023, and started a conversation, collective writing project, and several research trips to the Lough, over a period of 2.5 years. The collective writing project included conversations with many different people from differing perspectives and disciplines, with walks around the Lough's banks on several trips, that included being introduced to Druid and Herbalist cultures around the Lough.

 

Many ways of sensing the lough from alternative perspectives were explored, including video, sound, and data. The videos draw together the multiple temporalities and scales of a multi-species perspective, through collating: 4K aerial drone footage of the Lough, with 4K footage on top of the water when taken out by local people on boats, with 4K underwater footage also from the boat, as well as riverbanks and canals, and microscopic footage collected from several locations around the Lough where we identified the microcystis cyanobacteria. The deepest part of the Lough was explored with a hydrophone when kindly taken out on a boat early on in the project. I stayed on Ballyronan Marina, Lough Neagh, for two weeks in September 2024, working with scientists Dave Jewson, director of the internationally renown Limnology Lab, Lough Neagh, and Les Gornal inventor of the anaerobic digester.

 

​Shifting perspectives to the microbial scale

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Cyanobacterial remains of an
annulated tubular microfossil
Oscillatoriopsis longa

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Cyanobacteria: microcystis sample from Lough Neagh collected by Ami Clarke

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Transverse section of a dividing
cell of the Cynaobacterium Microcystis showing hexagonal stacking of the cylindrical gas vesicles

Petri dish wall photographs

of a fossil, sample, and diagram of cyanobacteria

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Ballyronan Marina September 2024 - field trip - Ami Clarke, David Jewson, Les Gornall, James Orr (Friends of the Earth)

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hydrophone audio recordings underwater at Lough Neagh

with Peter Harper, Shoreline Environment Officer,

Lough Neagh Partnership

'sensing the lough'

field recordings - audio, video, monitoring of the cyanobacteria

SONIC RITUAL
JOHN D'ARCY, HIVE CHOIR
AMI CLARKE

Sonic Ritual workshop and live jam.

Rituals have acted historically, as early technological interfaces, scoring human / nature relationships, in very particular ways. The work emphasises listening and sound, as practices that can de-centre the human, amongst the vulnerable ecologies of Lough Neagh and the watershed.  

 

The Sonic Ritual live jam performance brings together Clarke with John D’Arcy and HIVE choir, where performing live together proposes new ways of ‘being’ in the world ‘with other species’. Foregrounding considerations of how human voice/s in a polyphonic approach might sit within the delicate ensemble of a multi-species perspective, to reflect the new calibration we are hoping to bring about: a new symbiotic calibration of humans and nature, whilst furthering a paradigm shift to a microbial scale.

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