Considering Non-anthropocentric Music
Robert Blatt
Artist, performer, and theater maker Victoria Myronyuk shares an introduction and transcript from her audiovisual installation Songs to the Sea, shown as part of the group exhibition Fragile State in Liverpool and Odessa in 2019. The original installation immerses the listener in the melodic interpretation of the Greek myth about Psamathe, the goddess of sand, telling the story of her abduction by Aikos, transformation into a seal, and the loss of her son. An excerpt from Songs to the Sea can be heard on at the end of this page.
Victoria Myronyuk — Jul 4, 2024
Frederic Leighton, Psamathe, 1880. Public domain (Wikimedia)
1
Psamathe traditionally sits on the seashore with her back to the audience, wearing a cheap silk dress
from a European second-hand shop.
Behind her shoulders, there are huge
factory pipes with puffs of smoke.
Dark hair is gathered in a bun
on the back of her head.
She has her hiking boots on her feet.
Psamathe looks into the sea horizon,
and occasionally shakes her head to the beat of the seagulls
and to the blows of iron machines.
The excerpt is from an audiovisual installation featured in the Fragile State group exhibition, which was on view in Liverpool and Odessa in 2019. The piece envelops the listener in a melodic portrayal of the Greek myth about Psamathe, the Greek Nereid goddess of sand, detailing her abduction by Aikos, her transformation into a seal, and the subsequent loss of her son.
During my residency in Liverpool, I explored the Lady Lever Art Gallery, where Frederic Leighton’s painting with the same title captivated me. It depicted a nude female on the seashore, facing away in a pose of melancholic anticipation. Contemplating this painting, I pondered the varying emotions associated with waiting, influenced by the shoreline. Reflecting in 2023, I revisited this painting and my perceptions of time.
Back then, I contemplated the sea as a unifying force between two distant shores – Liverpool and Odessa. Waiting on each coast held distinct emotions and illusions on the horizon. Viewing the sea from the Ukrainian side symbolized a quest for peace amid the precarious reality of a country at war in the east, a conflict yet to touch me personally. That year, my demon was a chronic illness altering my identity through intense medications.
In Liverpool, a place of safety, I gazed back toward Odessa’s direction, yearning for home and freedom not to be found »in the West.« Strangely, the sea from my native shore symbolized threat and unpredictability, while from the other side, it evoked thoughts of drowning and oblivion. Tranquility and calmness were illusory perspectives.
Psamathe, the goddess of sand, served as a metaphor for an element interdependent with the sea. Its materiality stemmed from tangible energy, not maritime delusions. I identified with Psamathe’s story, drawn to her painful experience of corporeal mutation, believing vocal storytelling conveyed it aptly.
Today, after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the loss of friends, migration, and another health crisis induced by major stress, the sea reflects a cemetery of grief. Listening to The Songs to the Sea, I mourn Psamathe’s loss of homeland, identity, and loved ones. In these dark times, I increasingly believe in the transformative power of voice for pain relief and healing.
Victoria Myronyuk, still from Songs to the Sea, 2018–19
Victoria Myronyuk, still from Songs to the Sea, 2018–19
2
Aikos emerges from the sea,
Europe’s brother
He left his island surrounded by high rocks
and arrived on an unfamiliar shore.
The ants scurry behind him –
his slaves, gifted by his father.
Aikos’s movements are confident,
dark eyes look into new spaces
and into Psamathe.
3
Psamathe tries to answer Aikos,
but she is unable to utter the words –
they coalesce into a growl.
Psamathe loses strength in her legs
and falls into the sand
it becomes more comfortable to crawl:
her arms break,
fall away from the rest of her body,
the skin burns, peels,
and dark blue scales appear
from under the bloody cracks in the skin.
4
Psamathe is located on the coast
of the Aikos island
looking at the sea horizon.
Next to her, there is her son called Fok.
Aikos looks at them from behind.
5
A local healer tries to comfort Psamathe after the loss of her son.
She changes her into black clothes,
puts a black scarf on a head,
and leads her across the island
to a remote dungeon
where the islanders gather
for a collective ritual.
Victoria Myronyuk, Songs to the Sea
Listen to an excerpt from the sound installation
Liverpool/Odesa, 2018–19
The storytelling (the poetic interpretation of the myth) is in Ukrainian, while the melodic parts are spoken in English, Spanish, and some phrases in Georgian.
Victoria Myronyuk is an interdisciplinary artist, performer, and theater maker. She is temporarily based in a Polish village as a result of the war in Ukraine.
License CC BY-NC-ND
Copyrights: The texts and images in this article – unless no other rights holders are expressly named – are published under the terms of the »Creative Commons Attribution« – License CC BY-NC-ND Version 4.0: creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
Beteiligte Person(en)