Friday, September 30, 2011

Cabinet Panel Revisiting Extinct Sounds


We should keep a look out for the published material on this if they put something out. Looks incredible, or do some research into the panelists....

Panel / “Revisiting Extinct Sounds” by Cabinet Magazine


Please join artist Sari Carel and media scholar Jonathan Sterne for an evening of conversation addressing early experiments in sound reproduction and their link to contemporary sound culture. Moderated by Leah Abir, the evening will examine the relationship between sound and image, art and science, and imagination and technique through the mid-nineteenth-century device known as the phonoautograph. Invented by Edouard-Léon Scott de Martinville in 1857, the phonoautograph was a sound-visualizing machine that generated images of sound vibrations—images that resembled automatic drawings.

This early audiovisual mechanism was a starting point for Carel's "Semaphore Island," a work in process that uses phonoautograph drawings generated by sound recordings of extinct birds, as well as for Sterne's book "The Audible Past: Cultural Origins of Sound Reproduction," which outlines a comprehensive social historiography of sound culture. The event will feature footage of the only functioning phonoautograph that remains in existence today.

ABOUT THE PARTICIPANTS
Sari Carel is a multidisciplinary artist based in New York. She works primarily with video and sound, focusing on the interplay between the visual and the auditory. In her work, Carel explores representations of both the natural and the designed, often in relation to the modernist ethos and its various mutations throughout the twentieth century. Carel’s work has been exhibited internationally in venues such as Artists Space, Dumbo Arts Festival, Nicelle Beauchene Gallery, and Gavin Brown’s Enterprise in New York; LAX Art and Young Projects in Los Angeles; and Tavi Dresdner, Contemporary by Golconda, and the Heder Gallery in Tel Aviv. She has been awarded numerous fellowships and residencies, including AIR at the Stundars Museum, Finland; AIR Vienna; the ISCP Program and Socrates Sculpture Park Artist Fellowship, New York; and the Bundanon Residency, Australia. Her next project will take place at Contemporary by Golconda, Tel Aviv, in December.

Jonathan Sterne teaches in the Department of Art History and Communication Studies and the History and Philosophy of Science Program at McGill University. He works on sound, the history and philosophy of technology, cultural studies, music, and digital media. He is author of "The Audible Past: Cultural Origins of Sound Reproduction" (Duke University Press, 2003); "MP3: The Meaning of a Format" (Duke University Press, 2012); and numerous articles on media, technologies, and the politics of culture. He is also editor of "The Sound Studies Reader" (Routledge, 2012), which surveys and analyzes classic work on sound in the human sciences. For more information, see <sterneworks.org>.

Leah Abir is the inaugural Artis Curatorial Fellow at Creative Time, working in the Programming Department on the upcoming “Living as Form” exhibition. A curator and writer in the field of contemporary art, she completed her BA in art history and postgraduate studies in museology at Tel Aviv University and is currently writing her MA thesis in the Modern Art Department at Haifa University. Over the past three years, Abir worked as the associate curator and director of programming for Museums of Bat Yam, and has independently curated exhibitions at various galleries and museums throughout Israel. She has written extensively on contemporary art for various international publications and exhibition catalogues, and has taught courses on the history of curating and modern and contemporary art in academic and private institutions.

This event has been made possible by a generous grant from the New York State Council on the Arts. Beer for this event has been lovingly provided by Brooklyn Brewery.


For a calendar of upcoming Cabinet events, see www.cabinetmagazine.org/events/eventspacemain.php

For a list of all Cabinet events, past and present, see www.cabinetmagazine.org/events

Thursday, September 22, 2011

Audium SF

The Audium - a sound sculpture experiential space

http://www.audium.org/


We are conceived in sound
we grow
and emerge in its wake.
Our history is a collection
of sound sensations,
experiences, emotions
All uniting into an aural identity.
It is this ocean
of recollections, sound images,
dreams, memories
We share.
-- Stan Shaff, Composer

Friday, September 16, 2011

Doris Salcedo







by Colombian artist Doris Salcedo. She placed 1,600 chairs in the space between two buildings in Istambul, 2003.

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

no ghost just a shell



»No Ghost Just a Shell« was initiated by Philippe Parreno and Pierre Huyghe in 1999. They acquired the copyright for a figure called 'Annlee' and her original image from the Japanese agency »Kworks«, which develops figures (almost actors) for cartoons, comic strips, advertising and video games of the booming Japanese Manga industry. 'Annlee' was a cheap model: the price of a Manga figure relates to the complexity of its character traits and thus its ability to adapt to a story-line and 'survive' several episodes. 'Annlee' had no particular qualities, and so she would have disappeared from the scene very quickly. "True heroes are rare and extremely expensive …" (Parreno) Buying 'Annlee' rescued her from an industry that had condemned her to death.

The »No Ghost Just a Shell« project was intended to go on for a number of years. It offered 'Annlee' free of charge to a series of artists, 'commissioned' by the initiators, to be used for their 'own' stories. At the same time, the artists set up production facilities in Paris, co-ordinated by Anna-Léna Vaney, mainly so that elaborate and expensive video animation was available for the figure. Each of the projects realized with 'Annlee' is a "chapter in the history of a sign", and has a 'life' in the context of the individual artists' activities and within the joint project. The 'life-prolonging' measures taken by the »No Ghost Just a Shell« project for a short-lived, virtual and commercial being actually raise some 'melancholy' humanitarian questions, but also undermine economic mechanisms by allowing a product that is otherwise viable only in a commercial context to be used free of charge; the artists' autonomous production conditions are another factor.

http://www.noghostjustashell.com/