Marieke Istha on Wed, 16 May 2007 16:22:24 +0200 (CEST)
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<nettime-ann> Exhibition and Seminar (in)visible sounds
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- To: nettime-ann@nettime.org
- Subject: <nettime-ann> Exhibition and Seminar (in)visible sounds
- From: Marieke Istha <istha@montevideo.nl>
- Date: Fri, 11 May 2007 12:24:46 +0200
- User-agent: Thunderbird 1.5.0.10 (X11/20070403)
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(in)visible sounds
June 2 through July 14, 2007
Opening June 1, 5:00 p.m.
Erich Berger, David Haines & Joyce Hinterding, Usman Haque & Rob Davis,
Informationlab (Ursula Lavrencic & Auke Touwslager), Olga Kisseleva,
Brandon LaBelle & James Watts, Semiconductor, Theodore Watson
Exhibition in cooperation with the 5 days off festival www.5daysoff.nl
The omnipresence of computers and mobile communications apparatus has
led to digital technology increasingly becoming a part of our
environment. Invisible wireless networks have altered our ways of
communicating, working, learning and playing. They have even taken on an
important role in the creation of our identity and our relationships
with others. In the course of this development, interest in the
apparatus has increasingly shifted from the technology itself to the
role it plays in shaping our experience. The artists in this exhibition
investigate the invisible world of sound waves and frequencies and
electromagnetic fields. In all cases they touch on issues concerning the
radiation that is ever-present, but imperceptible to our senses. They
make use of technologies that are present around us, but invisible, and
by playing with electromagnetic waves and different frequencies their
works surprise us with an abundance of information and possibilities.
In his work Tempest (2004) Erich Berger(Sweden) makes use of the basic
principles of Van Eck Phreaking, a technology through which the content
van a computer screen can be reconstructed at a distance by picking up
the electromagnetic field surrounding that screen. In Tempest pure
generative graphic forms are transformed into a dense and intense
composition of sound, noise and light. The graphic forms that appear on
the screen produce radio waves, which are then picked up by several
transistor radios. These are tuned to various AM frequencies and
ultimately produce the distinct and lively sounds that go together with
the images. David Haines and Joyce Hinterding (Australia) use the live
data stream from televisions to precipitate avalanches. In their work
Purple Rain (2004) Haines and Hinterding draw an overwhelming connection
between the mystic forces of nature and the presence of the thousands of
watts that are stirred up by the frequencies of the electromagnetic
field. In the installation Evolving Sonic Environment (2005-2007) Usman
Haque and Rob Davis (UK) investigate to what degree the presence of
people in a space influences the audio composition created, without the
intervention of sensors. Several audio speakers hang form the ceiling,
each generating a sound with a different frequency. Intercommunication
between these units balances the sounds and maintains the sensitive
sonic ecosystem, which is only disrupted by visitors. The consequences
these interventions have on the brain of the space can be observed, live
on the internet..
The visitors also play an important role in the installation AudioSpace
(2005-2007) by Theodore Watson (US). In the 3D augmented aural space
visitors can leave messages for others in the form of sound. By means of
a special headset with a microphone, texts can be spoken into the space,
and at the same time, messages left earlier can be retrieved. The space
is filled with invisible messages from previous visitors. On the other
hand, Brandon LaBelle and James Watts (US) let one hear the mystic
sounds of the building. In the site-specific installation Radio Flirt
(2007) visitors with small portable radios walk through the space in
search of characteristic noises and the secrets of the building.
Olga Kisseleva (Russia) lets us see the flows of energy and magnetic
pollution that surround us. In Landstreams (2006) she creates a new type
of abstract landscape art. The paintings are based on various data flows
that have been analyzed by a computer. In the film Earth Moves (2006) by
Semiconductor (UK) the visualization of unseen forces is also central.
Earth Moves reveals an unstable world that is always in flux. The
contours and forms of everything around us are being altered by the
invisible force of acoustic waves. This process is imperceptible to the
naked eye. By combining digital photos of various places with sound from
the same locations, new acoustic landscapes are created. Finally, in a
humorous way Informationlab (Ursula Lavrencic, SLO and Auke Touwslager,
Netherlands) reveal the invisible aura of the mobile telephone. Cell
Phone Disco (2006) is an installation made out of LED-lamps that respond
to the electromagnetic field of mobile telephones. As visitors walk
through the installation while making calls, the telephone signal
activates the LEDs, so that a trail of flickering LEDs follow them
through the space. The unseen body of the mobile telephone becomes
perceptible.
In addition to the works in the exhibition a selection of video works
from the Institute’s own collection can be viewed on monitors. These
afford insight into an important historic tradition.
Websites artists:
http://kisseleva.free.fr/
http://www.semiconductorfilms.com/
http://randomseed.org/
http://www.sunvalleyresearch.com/haines.htm
http://www.haque.co.uk/evolvingsonicenvironment.php
http://cellphonedisco.informationlab.org/
http://www.errantbodies.org/labelle.html
http://muonics.net/
Seminar (in)visible technology
Saturday, June 2, 2:00 to 4:30 p.m.
The consequences of invisible technology are to be further examined in a
brief seminar. It is becoming increasingly difficult to recognize the
effects of these technologies, because once technologies become
invisible they also disappear from our consciousness. The environment is
no longer experienced as constructed, and people become even more remote
from the technology and its influence on their everyday life, actions
and thought. In order to break out of this cycle we need to have
examples that throw a new light on existing networks and structures. A
number of speakers will be casting light into the darkness. The
conversation will be based around examples which introduce other ways of
accessing invisible networks.
With: Usman Haque & Rob Davis, David Haines & Joyce Hinterding and Olga
Kisseleva.
Commentator: Rob van Kranenburg.
Admission 5,- (students 3,-).
Reservations: info@montevideo.nl
5 days off takes place from July 4 through 8 in Paradiso, Melkweg, the
Netherlands Media Arts Institute and the Heineken Music Hall. Check for
updates: www.5daysoff.nl
Exhibition open: Tuesday through Saturday, 1:00 – 6:00 p.m., also open
the first Sunday of the month. Admision 2,50 (1,50 with discount).
During 5 days off, free admission with any sort of 5 days off ticket.
For more information and visual material: Marieke Istha, Communications
020 6237101/06 41635002, istha@montevideo.nl
With thanks to: Fund for Podium Programming and Marketing, Mondriaan
Foundation, Prince Bernhard Cultural Fund, VSB Fund, Australian Council,
Maison Descartes, BeamSystems and Steim
Netherlands Media Art Institute
Montevideo / Time Based Arts
Keizersgracht 264
1016 EV Amsterdam
The Netherlands
www.montevideo.nl
T +31 (0)20 6237101
F +31 (0)20 6244423
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