About HECS

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The Center is Open / HECS is ajar!

This wiki is a space for testing out ideas for the Heritage Education Centre Space (HECS) that is unfolding. HECS is not quite yet open, so we use: ajar. Open means: open for construction. Open for contributions, participation. Ajar means: there will be some effort and energy involved to open up the space, we welcome and are grateful for the involvement, and the parameters of this are not yet fixed. HECS is one part of Bidston Observatory Artistic Research Centre.

Orientations of the HECS

The HECS documents spaces, objects and instruments related to the Bidston Observatory on the Wirral, Merseyside, UK. Most of the usual tales being told and retold about the observatory celebrate a succession of White British male scientists and their great inventions. HECS tries to make space for accounts that are extra to nation state, normative ideas of progress and the advancement of Science.

The practice of observation, operating scientific instruments and investment in observatories is entangled with different scales of capitalist endeavour, colonialist and imperialist modes of worlding. The Bidston Observatory is connected to such modes through its contributions to the maritime industry, natural earth sciences and oceonography. HECS interrogates different instrumentations and approaches in these historically defined disciplines at various scales. It is a place to articulate these connections, and the responsibilities they bring.

HECS gathers facts about the building itself, the artefacts and instruments that it once housed and still houses, but tries to connect them to larger histories and futures. No histories are told without bias, and so are the stories in this wiki.

Invitations for contributing to this wiki ~ add your own

The wiki does not look to homogenise voices or smooth transitions. It aims to be humble, transparent and expansive. It is meant to be re-read, written, re-written through multiple voices and from different perspectives.

For the moment we propose to re-narrate The Bidston Observatory from two directions. On the one hand, through formulating a list of questions with possible answers that seem in need of collective thinking. On the other hand by experimenting with describing historical and imaginary (non)objects that are linked to the Bidston Observatory. This also includes a reflection on what objects are present in this wiki and will find their place in the HECS.

Care of this wiki

The wiki needs to be cared for collectively. Damage will happen over time, please do offer repairs if you notice wear or signs of use in the writing.

Questions

These are some of the questions that came up while we are trying to imagine to build the HECS in discussion with many others. Please feel welcome to add questions, or to rephrase the ones below.

  • How to contextualise The Bidston Observatory? As a colonial apparatus, as ...
  • How can our understandings of the site and its histories not reproduce colonial relationships and patterns?
  • Are the instruments at the site usuable, dead, or a mix of both? How can their active use and application be a part of artistic research in the present?
  • How do the instruments at Bidston today relate to replicas, originals or other versions of the same technologies?
  • How can damage to the site and related objects be rethought? What repair skills – conceptual and mechanical – can contributors bring?
  • What ways of thinking or practices could be hospiced into disappearance rather than repaired?
  • What does it mean to accumulate a collection, in a site like this? For a project like BOARC?
  • What defines a museum? What counts as heritage?
  • Can this wiki document the absences and traces at Bidston Observatory?
  • How does the space of Bidston reflect its intended uses? How can Bidston and its 'contents' be repurposed?
  • How can the wiki include views from different people impacted by colonialism and its legacies? By disgruntled historians of science, astronomy, and oceanography? By the local community?
  • Can the entries here archive aspects of how knowledge has been made and structured, now and in the past?
  • How can the wiki address archival sources in ways that read them both against and along the grain of their original purposes?
  • How is instrumentation linked to slavery?
  • How to take the wider implications of observation into account?