Dr. Phil Smith is a performance-maker, writer and academic
researcher, specialising in work around walking, site-specificity,
mythogeographies, web-walking, somatics and counter-tourism. With
artist Helen Billinghurst, he is one half of Crab & Bee, who have
recently completed an exhibition and walking project called
‘Plymouth Labyrinth (funded by Arts Council England), a short
walking project in the Isles of Scilly and a residency at Teats
Hill slipway. They recently published their book, The Pattern
(2020).
In his most recent book, Living in the Magical Mode, (an edited
collection of documents surviving from a discontinued book club),
Phil starts from the insistence that "Magic is not a power or
command over nature, but a relationship with nature" and goes on to
explain his view of everything.
With Tony Whitehead and photographer John Schott, Phil recently
published Guidebook for an Armchair Pilgrimage. He has also
developed a ‘subjectivity-protective movement practice’ with
Canada-based choreographer Melanie Kloetzel, published in January
2021 as COVERT: A Handbook. With Claire Hind and Helen
Billinghurst, he co-organised the 2019 ‘Walking’s New Movements’
conference at the University of Plymouth - on which Walking Bodies
is based. As company dramaturg and co-writer for TNT Theatre
(Munich), he most recently premiered ‘Free Mandela’, co-authored
with TNT’s artistic director Paul Stebbings, about the end of
apartheid in South Africa. Paul and Phil have recently written a
book about TNT Theatre’s transformation from tiny experimental
theatre company to global touring organisation.
Phil is a member of site-based arts collective Wrights & Sites, who
published The Architect-Walker in 2018. As well as Walking
Stumbling Limping Falling (2017) with poet Alyson Hallett, Phil’s
publications include Making Site-Specific Theatre and Performance
(Red Globe/Palgrave Macmillan, 2018), Rethinking Mythogeography
(2018) (with US photographer John Schott), Anywhere (2017), A
Footbook of Zombie Walking and Walking’s New Movement (2015), On
Walking and Enchanted Things (2014), Counter-Tourism: The Handbook
(2012) and Mythogeography (2010). He is an Associate Professor
(Reader) at the University of Plymouth.
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