Insights Public Lecture

Photo credit: Anne Whitehead

In December 2024, David and I marked the end of the Sounding the Angel project by contributing a public lecture to Newcastle University’s Insights lecture series. The sound recording from the project was reinstalled in the Arches Sound Project to coincide with the lecture, so that people had the chance to hear it in full before and after the lecture.

David and I presented the lecture together, in recognition that it had been a collaboration between us at every step of the way. We began by describing our own encounter with the memorial at the Angel, which opened out into a broader description of the project and its aims. We then focused on David’s recording of the sounds of the site across the seasons of the year, before letting the voices of our participants lead the conversation with their reflections on what it had meant to them to leave memorial tokens at the Angel. We closed by pulling the different strands together into a reflection on what it means to use sound as a means of recording a spontaneous memorial.

We had some fantastic responses from those who attended the lecture and it was great to see so much interest in the project. Some of those who came had heard about the project from the early radio broadcasts and followed its progress in this blog, while others had encountered it for the first time through the lecture.

We gave the last word to the Angel, playing David’s recording of its metal structure contracting at the end of a hot summer’s day in our last visit to the site together. Amplified through the audio system of the lecture theatre, the sound reverberated through the floor, even as it had radiated out from the base of the Angel on the day that we recorded. It felt like a fitting close to a project called Sounding the Angel!

You can watch the lecture here.

World Health Day 2025

child's drawing of dolphin in sea
Film still, Where We Will Go (2023) by Kate Sweeney

Yesterday marked World Health Day, which this year marks the start of a global campaign focused on improving maternal and newborn health. To mark this initiative, Newcastle University published a blog that profiled the leading research in this area that is being carried out at Newcastle.

It was a privilege to see Where Will We Go featured in the blog alongside medical research advances, and to see Judith Rankin’s wider research in this area recognised and celebrated. Our project sought to create a supportive resource for parents who lose a twin at birth, so that they could hear the voices and experiences of the families we worked with. It was very special to hear from the parents who participated in the project that they would use the film to speak with their children about their lost siblings when the time was right to do so.

You can read the blog post about the work in newborn and maternal health at Newcastle University here.