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Sion Parkinson

Thursday 28th November

Venue
Topping & Company Booksellers of St Andrews, 7 Greyfriars Garden, St Andrews, Fife KY16 9HG
Doors Open
6.50pm
Start Time
7.30pm
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Sion Parkinson on Stinkhorn

Join us for a pungent celebration of the stinkhorn mushroom with artist, musician, writer, and AHRC Research Fellow at the Royal Botanical Garden Edinburgh Siôn Parkinson.

The stinkhorn mushroom is one of the weirdest wonders of the fungal world, certainly the smelliest. Ever since it was described by a Dutch doctor in a sixteenth-century pamphlet, the stinkhorn has been reported to emit odors resembling damp earth, dung, rotting cheese, decaying flesh, and even semen. It also happens to look like a phallus, bursting out of a subterranean egg to poke above the ground, where it lures insects towards its slimy, fetid cap. In Stinkhorn, artist, musician, and writer Siôn Parkinson asks: What can the pervasive stench of this mushroom and the droning noise of the flies compelled towards it reveal about how sounds and smells are combined in the imagination?

A heady mix of natural history, science writing, musicology, philosophy of the senses, and illness memoir, Parkinson uses examples of so-called bad smells to argue for a theory of Stink as a kind of “smelling sound.” Alongside images and insights from the author’s search for stinkhorn fungi in nature, the book expands upon the philosophy of listening to consider the role of the nose and the “nasal imaginary” in how we make sense of sound.


Siôn Parkinson (b. Dundee, Scotland) is an artist, musician and author. Originally trained as a sculptor, over the past decade Siôn has experimented with the human voice, electronic and acoustic instruments to create intimate, visceral music which he performs in costume often alongside other musicians.