* (restored)
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Céleste Boursier-Mougenot from here to ear (2014)
A sonic arrangement featuring songbirds and electric guitars, from here to ear consists of more than seventy zebra finches, enchanting little chaffinches from central Australia, “performing” in the Square. These tuneful and gregarious birds settle in groups on unusual perches: a dozen amplified electric guitars and basses ready to receive the finches, which, as they fly about on the strings, play pre-recorded rock, punk and heavy-metal chords. While the sounds they generate overlie their own songs, the composition of claws on electric guitars that they improvise is governed by the beating of the birds’ wings and by the movements of visitors as they walk around the gallery.
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Otomo Yoshihide hyper wr player – without records hi-fi version (2009)
What is the sound that a record player has in itself? Adopting today’s state-of-the-art technologies to the full, this work “without record player” is based on the concept of “without records,” which uses only old portable record players and has been evolved through stages. This hyper-version performs deconstruction and reconstruction in the current perspective, taking away the recorded media (records) of a record player, the origin of recording media.
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Otomo Yoshihide + Yasutomo Aoyama without records (2007)
In this installation, there are about a hundred portable record players without records, but equipped with unusual materials such as corrugated paper or iron. In the space of the foyer, turntables scattered everywhere, high and low, right and left, produce noises by the rotating friction, resonating in multilayer. Quiet, low-fi sounds form groups and change the entire image of sounds. When visitors move the position of a player or replace the needle, an additional new world of sound appears.
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Chelpa Ferro Octógono (2009)
In this installation, the group Chelpa Ferro, formed by Barrão, Luiz Zerbini and Sergio Mekler presents a musical programme in the form of a large sound speaker that goes up and down, entering and rising above a receptacle, in a continuous movement, during 8 hours, provoking different hearings in each level.
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Florian Hecker Event, Stream, Object (2010)
Hecker’s project Event, Stream, Object creates an unusual listening environment to manipulate one’s perception of sound. Hecker’s multilayered composition is supported by a system of eight MM-4XP loudspeakers, each conveying a sequence of synthetic sounds. The miniature loudspeakers are suspended from the ceiling, with bent reflectors in front of the them to emphasize the way sounds rebound and are diverted, thus heightening the complexity of the experience. “In my works, I have to place sound sources at distinct positions, where seeing them becomes a crucial aspect for the multimodal experience of these pieces,” says Hecker. “Event, Stream, Object dramatizes an uncoupling of sound sources in the space and the locations from which we perceive them to come.”
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Carsten Nicolai unidisplay (2014)
The installation unidisplay employs visual semiotics to examine various theories of perception. The work operates with a number of modules of different visual effects that interfere with the viewers’ perception. The installation unfolds against a long projection wall in a mirrored room, thus visually expanding like a mise en abyme. The basic visual – made up of graphic translations of various units of time measurement – acts as a world clock and evokes the notion of intertwining time, between past, present, and future.
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Nathaniel Mellors Hippy Dialectics (2010)
Hippy Dialectics is an animatronic sculpture. The sculpture’s two heads are connected by hair and each repeats a line from a moment in a script where Daddy is losing the plot—”Listen mate, I’m having a few issues. Small, administrative problems really, not a big deal … ” It is partially influenced by Pasolini’s 1968 classic Theorem, in which a seemingly angelic guest (Terence Stamp) arrives at a bourgeois household and acts upon individual desires to seduce each of its members, from the patriarchal father to the maid. Other influences include Beckett and the theatre of the absurd, and British TV drama and sitcoms of the 1970s and 80s.
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Tristan Perich Microtonal Wall (2011)
Microtonal Wall is made up of 1,500 very simple one-bit speakers, tuned individually to create an intricately varied continuum of pitch, rendering this twenty-five-foot wall a spectrum of sound. Perich has explained, “Each listener’s exploration of that aural space shapes what they hear, from the totality of white noise (from a distance), to the single frequency of each speaker (up close).” This near-endless variation “opens the scope of the piece to the entire universe, since only from an infinite distance would we be equidistant to each speaker, though in that case they would also have zero volume, and we would be very far from home.”
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Kevin Beasley Strange Fruit (Pair I) and (Pair II) (2015)
Strange Fruit (Pair I) and (Pair II) incorporate the sounds of the museum into sculptures made from sneakers, foam, resin, and other materials. For this performance, the artist used the sounds recorded by these objects to build environmental and experimental compositions.
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Lyota Yagi Sound Sphere (2011)
Cassette tape’s magnetic strips are wound into balls. Balls can be played.
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Zhang Ding Enter the Dragon (2015)
Zhang Ding’s solo exhibition and performance, named after the celebrated Bruce Lee film, is one of a kind. Zhang transformed the ICA theatre into a ‘mutating sound sculpture’, layering the room with reflective surfaces, suspended sound panels and a series rotating mirrored sculptures positioned next to two music stages that formed a disorienting maze.
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Keita Onishi Forest and Trees (2012)
“Forest and Trees” is an installation of moving images and sounds employing 12 digital photo frames. The animation and its sound effects playing through the internal speakers of each frame gradually come together to form music.
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Zimoun 138 prepared dc-motors, cotton balls, cardboard boxes (2011)
Zimoun creates complex kinetic sound sculptures by arranging industrially produced parts according to seemingly simple rules. Using motors, wires, ventilators, etc.., he creates closed systems that develop their own behavior and rules similarly to artificial creatures. Once running, they are left to themselves and go through an indeterminable process of (de)generation. These quasi autonomous creatures exist in an absolutely synthetic sphere of lifeless matter. However, within the precise, determinist systems creative categorioes suddenly reappear, such as deviation, refusal and transcience out of which complex patterns of behavior evolve.
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Christy Matson Movements (2008)
Christy Matson’s interactive installation Movements produces the grainy, clacking tones of a working loom when viewers press their hands on three monumental, wall-hung jacquard weavings, intersecting both the act of listening and the act of touching.
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Wang Chung-Kun beTube-6set (2012)
Born in 1982, Wang Chung-Kun is one of the rising stars in Media art in Taiwan. He has created various forms of machinery that have consistently maintained an intriguing purity and peculiar sense of beauty. As the viewers approach, these machines operate on their own untiringly. Sound-making, switching on and off, exhaling, spinning or twinkling, they can simply do more than a single action. Rather, they have their own rhythm variation, as if they have a life of their own.
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Bartholomäus Traumeck Years (2011)
A record player that plays slices of wood. Year ring data is translated into music. A tree’s year rings are analysed for their strength, thickness and rate of growth. This data serves as basis for a generative process that outputs piano music. It is mapped to a scale which is again defined by the overall appearance of the wood (ranging from dark to light and from strong texture to light texture). The foundation for the music is certainly found in the defined ruleset of programming and hardware setup, but the data acquired from every tree interprets this ruleset very differently.
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Mark Leckey BigBoxStatueAction (2003)
This is a piece I made in around 2003 called Big Box Statue Action … at Tate Britain; this is a statue by Jacob Epstein called Jacob and the Angel. I’ve been going to Tate Britiain for a long time, and it’s always there. They’re always shunting it around, they’re never quite sure where to put it. I always found it very alienating … it has this power and bulk and it’s such an obstinate thing… What I ended up finding is that it speaks a language, i.e. of Modernism, that means nothing to me. I can’t connect with that thing [but] I wanted to address [it]. I made a sound system, because I always loved them as objects that made sound, and made a sound that in itself is sculptural.
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Dominique Petitgand Je m’en vais (2009)
Dominique Petitgand presents a piece that articulates various relationships with speech (monologue, dictation, screams or cacophonies), language (the voices in French are accompanied by their English translations), editing (fragmentations, synchronicities or temporal gaps), space (playing of distances, mixing, resonances).
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David McConnell Phonosymphonic Sun (2008- 2009)
“Phonosymphonic Sun” is a sound sculpture/installation by David McConnell. Each phonograph was rebuilt vertically and the turntables, now painted in a colorfield array, spun continually as each speaker was repurposed to play individual instruments in an 18 song soundtrack written, recorded and performed by McConnell in 2008- 2010. This score was created with rare antique instruments, audio devices and naturally occurring sounds.
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Christian Marclay Surround Sound (2015)
This is a video of people in the Paula Cooper Gallery in NYC enjoying Christian Marclay’s Surround Sound, a floor-to-ceiling, wraparound video installation. The piece explores the punchy graphic sound effects of comic books (think “POW,” “CRACK,” etcetera). It is a silent video of a visual trope meant to suggest an auditory experience, making it a work of multiple translations, among other things.
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p.s. Hey. ** David Ehrenstein, Hi. I would love to. As inevitably seems to be the case, I’m getting more swamped with work related obligations and family demands than I anticipated, so my short time is getting eaten, but I’ll try to find time to come over, although I’m not sure that I can, as of this morning at least. I will do about the release date. Our distributor is at the Berlin festival, but they and I will talk when he’s back next week. And thank you so, so much for wanting to write on the film! ** Bill, My big pleasure on the plug. It’s as close as I can get to vicariously being there unless, I hope, it’s videoed and uploaded. It’s raining the veritable cats and dogs here too. I barely escaped a bad fender bender yesterday. I don’t know Leyya Tawil’s work, but I will see what I can find online, thank you. ** JM, Ha ha. Yes, I met Adam and his sister briefly at the screening. They seemed really nice, and I so happy they liked the film. Everything swimming with you? ** _Black_Acrylic, Thanks, Ben. How did the completion go? Is it impeccably complete? I really want to see ‘Burning’. Great to hear it hits its mark. ** Jeff J, Hi, Jeff. Yeah, it’s been wonderful to hang with Michael, and of course honored that did a show on the film. Oh shit, really? About the sales. That’s truly bizarre and unexpected and kind of makes absolutely no sense based on the book’s incredible reception. Wow. I know acclaims doesn’t automatically translate into buys, but … I’m sorry, man. I guess remember that the initial burst is just that. I know with my books, it’s a gradual and long life thing that always counts and pays off. Sure, we can talk about that or Paris or anything offline. Probably best once I get back to Paris because things are getting pretty rushed and busy here these last couple of days. I lead back to Paris on Sunday. I’m really glad you’re able to work on your book and music, and the assemblages are super intriguing. Thank you ever so much about the Roussel. And, I mean, of course, a post re: the Akermann memoir would be amazing! How great that they’re publishing that! That is some press! ** Steve Erickson, Hi. Well, he’s really more of a conceptual artist, so those aren’t the kinds of paintings that are meant to exist without the knowledge of how they came about. Look forward to your review. Everyone, Steve has reviewed the Colombian film BIRDS OF PASSAGE here. ** Okay. Up there is your restored post for today — another foray into sound art, which, apparently and obviously, is an area of intrigue for me. See you tomorrow.
Oops posted on the last post just a sec ago, haha. It’s Valentines today writing some poems. Romance in Paris makes my bowels burble, its so loiney. Is that a real word? Ive always thought everything in Paris looks better wet and with cum all over it. Hehe. Cant get Vixen out of my head. Might Cupids arrow touch your touche. Are there Easter Eggs so to speak in PGL? xoxo
Hi Dennis, glad you enjoyed your trip and looking forward to listening to your Silverblatt interview. I really really enjoyed this post. It was a pure joy. Also got me thinking a teeny bit more seriously about an idea I have for an installation that would require some pretty sophisticated robotics and a full year on display.
I’ve been watching Out 1 (the long version) and it’s hitting me really hard. I’ll reserve full comment till the end but the movie and my soul are meeting each other at just the right point. I also saw Todd Haynes’s “Poison” which I guess is also up your alley (taste is so risky to judge)? It really inspired me especially in its flaws, showing how messy derivative early work can still feel fresh despite and perhaps because of inextricable flaws–you’d kill the work by trying to fix them.
Dennis were you at Tosh’s reading last night at Book Soup. I arrived a bit late so if you came and went I may have missed you. In any event it was wonderful and so is Tosh’s book. Tosh is directly connected to Hip Hollywood as I’ve always known and loved it: Russ Tamblyn, Billy Gray, Toni Basil, Dean Stockwell and of course Dennis Hopper. What’s so fascinating is the fact that these were simply the people he knew through his father. It wasn’t until later in life that he realized how seminal they were.
5 minutes of poetry for my muses
Happy Vtines hos
“Girl, dont go away mad. Bye, Girl!”
I never loved you!
Please dont believe me.
I never loved you!
Please dont make me go away.
I never loved you!
I’m sorry I destroyed our life.
I never loved you!
I’m sorry I hit you.
I never loved you!
Motherfucker your friends are cute!
“My two blond angels.”
Cherub babies
Flying around my thoughts
Twins and strangers to each other
One turns to a constipated devil
The others eyes turn yellow with tears
One always with his expensive purse
The other with permutating other Cupid body
No place for me
They know Im just playing them
And Im old and tired of the game
“Ode to self.”
They should have put you down years ago
You wear the sky like mange
Your face has caved from bad dog raps on the nose
Why dont you jump in a pine box
Youre a waste
You failed at life
How could you have been so confused
No future No future
Let the pain in and you wont last a minute
“It smells like Roses”
Dingleberry
Dingleberry
You look so lonely
Dingleberry
Dingleberry
You seem so free
Dingleberry
Dingleberry
Is there something in my teeth
Anise breath
Dirt gum
Oh fuck Im gonna
Punch you in the chest
“Love true fucking love.”
I want a lamb
I want a bitch
I want an itch I cant scratch
I want a collapsable devil
I want a spit in the face
I want you to stab me until I die
I want you to be afraid of me
I want you to be beautiful forever
I want you tell me strange things
I want your severed head to believe I loved you
Always good to see or hear what Mark Leckey is up to. His long running Death Of Rave record label is very much essential.
I was at the DCA print studio last night and I’m happy to say that completion of The Call inaugural issue was a complete success! I now have a pile of paper copies, but the wait for my funding app prevents me from distributing them just yet. Still I’m very chuffed with how it’s all looking and if that award comes through, then there’ll be a shiny new website to host the project in a few weeks’ time. For now here is another pic of the zine in progress and here is a kind of business card that I’d like to send out with anything The Call-related through the post.
Dennis,
Hope you are having a good time in LA. Have you gotten to any of the fairs this week? I have mixed feelings about art fairs, but I do like to get out of my bubble and see new work and get caught up with people. I went to ALAC on Wednesday night, and I’m planning to see Felix in Hollywood on Saturday.