Embodiment
of Time.
Yasuhiro
Sakamoto mit Iñigo Giner Miranda
Dave Hebb
Opening: 31 August, 2012 8PM
Exhibition runs: 1 September - 14 October, 2012
Opening hours: Fri - Sun, 2-6 PM and by appointment
Yasuhiro
Sakamoto & Iñigo Giner Miranda,
Visible Canon. String
Quartet without Strings for Four Loudspeakers and an Art Machine
2012 (sketch)
As part of the current exhibition series Time & Technology Art
Laboratory Berlin welcomes you to the exhibition Embodiment
of Time with new works by Yasuhiro Sakamoto with Iñigo
Giner Miranda and by Dave Hebb.
The
Japanese artist and scholar Yasuhiro Sakamoto and the Spanish
composer Iñigo Giner Miranda have developed the installation
Visible Canon. String Quartet without Strings for Four
Loudspeakers and an Art Machine, shown in the front room, especially
for this exhibition. The work transforms the complex time structures
of contemporary and classical music into an acoustic-visual model.
This sound sculpture interprets the term music in the broadest
sense as an organisation of time, which not only creates purely
tonal material, but also patterns of movement (rolling marbles,
turning wheels) and optical patterns (video), presenting a significant
contribution to our understanding of the ever more complex relation
we have to time in the 21st century.
Based
on the Pythagoras Machine which was realised by Sakamoto and colleagues
in Japan from 2004-2006, this new sound sculpture has been developed
on the basis of three pieces of classical and modern music. The
first movement is a fragment from Johann Pachelbels Canon
und Gigue in D-major from the 2nd half of the 17th century,
played by the American violinist Matt Peebles. The second movement
is a reversal of Pachelbels canon. The reversal remains surprisingly
harmonic, but follows the opposite logic; its musical syntax has
been altered. The third movement is a composition by Iñigo
Giner Miranda, recording analogue sounds taken from the art machine
itself. The piece is a sound canon with three parts that play the
same voice at regular intervals.
The
artwork also contains a computer program, developed by Sakamoto
himself, that is designed specifically for this installation and
directs a complex marble run. Thus, the artwork can be understood
as a sculptural algorithm. With our project we focus on the
cutting point of audio-visual perception and try to embody a cross-modal
Gesamtgestalt that links sound (=tone) and vision (=motion)
in the perceptual process. (Y. Sakamoto & I. Giner Miranda,
July 2012).
Dave Hebb, Monitor, 2010-12
The American artist Dave Hebb deals with artifacts of industrial
civilization in the form of photography, video and installation.
He observes and documents the contrast between the natural organic
process of growth and decay and the clear geometric shapes of our
technological infrastructure. His artistic projects often take place
for long periods of time and over different seasons.
His
video installation Monitor, shown in the back room, is a
video and photographic documentation of an environmental intervention
extending over a one-year period. Hebb placed a computer monitor
outdoors and over the entire year documented changes to the environment
several times a week. His piece is played on old computers and monitors
and is inherently unstable, a common problem of technology as it
becomes obsolete. This self-reference is also shown through the
display of the video on the same type of monitor that is the subject
of the piece itself, which is presented more as an archeological
object than merely a means of presentation.
"Issues
of permanence, entropy, obsolescence and the impulse to control
and sanitize are contrasted with the regenerative power and cyclical
structure of nature. The use of symmetrical and circular compositions
and rhythmic patterns invoke symbolic sacred art from various cultures
and time periods." (Dave Hebb, July 2012). Viewers are challenged
to reflect on their individual relationships with nature and technology
as well as how technology is affecting our experience of time.
Regine
Rapp and Christian de Lutz (curators)
With the generous support of:
Senatskanzlei
für Kulturelle Angelegenheiten - Berlin
Media
Partner:
The
Time & Technology series is made possible in part by
a generous gift from Michael Schröder.
Yasuhiro
Sakamoto & Iñigo Giner Miranda, Visible
Canon. String Quartet without Strings
for Four Loudspeakers and an Art Machine,
2012
Dave
Hebb, Monitor, 2012
Yasuhiro
Sakamoto in the 'Time and Technology' Panel, at the MutaMorphosis
conference, Prague, December 2012
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