“…While creative geographies focus us, in part, on questions of method there are much wider engagements with theatre and performance. In recent review articles investigating geography's relationship with the arts (Hawkins, 2011(Hawkins, , 2012, different ventures have been noted ranging from: painting (Colls, 2011;Crouch, 2010), sculpture and social sculpture (Cook, 2000;Gandy, 1997), participatory arts practice (Parr, 2007;Tolia-Kelly, 2007), new genre public art (Mackenzie, 2006;Pollock & Sharp, 2007), photography (Vasudevan, 2007), sound art (Butler, 2006), bio art (Dixon, 2008), dance (Nash, 2000;Rose, 1999;Thrift, 1997) and Situationist inspired, psychogeographical practice (Bonnett, 1992(Bonnett, , 2009Pinder, 2005). In this latter sphere (of psycho-geographies, particularly involving memory and nostalgia; see Bonnett & Alexander, 2013), these urban engagements offer space for 'a sensuous realm that is imagined, lived, performed and contested' (Pinder, 2005, p. 285).…”