Aeolian harps activated by the wind in regional Victoria, sound excerpt, 2023, courtesy of the artist.
When I first began working with Aeolian (wind) harps, the boundaries between sculpture, performance and the earth began to dissolve, as if touched by some ancient magic. This transformation deepened after an encounter with Peter Roberts, a music-thanatologist from Geelong, who, like a priest of old, played his harp at the bedside of patients facing the end of their lives. I considered my Aeolian harps—instruments played by the wind itself moving through the strings, creating music without touch, without hands—in a new light. As tools for palliative care, they appeared more delicate and haunting, like breath exhaled or spirit leaving the body. The resonance of wind and soul kindled the idea to create harps not merely as musical instruments but as sculptures bearing the weight of memory, of the land itself. Fashioned from antique surveyors’ tripods, crowned with pyramid amplifiers, they stand like sentinels, capturing the wild, unaltered breath of the landscape—a cartographic echo, a memory, etched in sound.
+ Aeolian harp Jen Valender, 2024. Installation detail Shepparton Art Museum, courtesy of the artist.
Prior to moving to Melbourne, Australia, I lived in Wellington, New Zealand for three years— the world’s windiest city. Positioned at the southernmost tip of the North Island, Wellington is caught between the wind channels of the northwest Tasman Sea and the southeast Pacific Ocean. These eastward-moving air currents are driven by a combination of factors: air displaced from the Equator toward the South Pole, the Earth's rotation, and the lack of landmasses at these latitudes to interrupt their flow.1 My desire to work materially with the wind began from here.
In this environment, the wind is more than a meteorological phenomenon. I observed and experienced ‘wind rage’, a local term born from the frustration of battling gusts, which push and pull with such ferocity that even a short walk can leave one feeling as though they have been physically bullied by nature. This is not a city for hats nor hairdos. Wellington’s winds do not merely blow—they roar, moan and sigh, as do the people who live under their constant influence. These gales have the power to sculpt landscapes and carve sedimentary traces upon the earth. Such forces create an electric energy, a sense of romanticism, and a constant reminder of our vulnerability to powers beyond our control.
While invisible to the eye, wind is tangible in sound. Its sonic presence embodies an unseen spirit greater than anything under human dominion. Throughout history, the wind has inspired myths, deities, and legends across cultures—Tāwhiri, the Māori god of weather; Bieggolmai, the Sami god of the summer wind; Feng Po, the Chinese goddess known as ‘Grandma Wind’; and Aeolus, the Greek god of winds.2 My Aeolian harps capture this interplay between the invisible and embodied— strings vibrate in response to the wind, producing an improvised composition that is both natural and mystical.
+ Aeolian harp Jen Valender, 2023. Installation and sound detail, MPavilion Queen Victoria Gardens, courtesy of the artist.
When the invitation came to collaborate at MPavilion Parkville with members of Etan Creative Vision Art Studio from Taiwan, an opportunity emerged. One where our distinct engagements with the wind through performance, sculpture, and music could be attuned to our physical environment, invisible forces and each other.
We will create a performance that is as much about the process as it is about the final artwork. Here, art and nature will intersect, identities and topographies merge, and the act of collaboration collapses into the creative output itself.3 Just as the wind shapes the Wellington landscape, I see this project harnessing the power of the wind to create a new form of energy—a synthesis of sound, sculpture and site.
Art events, Brian Eno suggests, are “short-lived communities,” bringing people together to share a collective experience.4 These fleeting moments allow us to connect, to listen, to uncover common ground through curiosity. We invite you to join this momentary community, to witness the live exchange of art ecologies carried together on a breeze. Come, listen, and be part of this collective experience at University Square.