Showing posts with label sound. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sound. Show all posts

Wednesday, 12 May 2010

Today's idea - Brian Eno's Speaker Flower Sound Installation



More Brian Eno today as his Speaker Flower Sound Installation transforms the Grade I Listed Marlborough House on Brighton's Old Steine. "The installation includes fifty Eno-designed speaker flowers, each with its own sound created in response to the once-magnificent building." Sound-reactive installations make me happy. Kinetica this year had some lovely ones. Eno's been doing a lot of installation pieces as curator of Brighton Festival and the reaction's been great so far.

We also recommend his '77 Million Paintings' piece as part of the Brighton Festival.

The blurb also mentions the presence of exclusive prints and a specially commissioned CD of Eno's music. Hurrah, art and buying things.

Running until 23 May 2010.

Cost: Free
Info: here
Location: Marlborough House
Map: here

Tuesday, 11 May 2010

Today's idea - Brian Eno's '77 Million Paintings' Exhibition (free)



Musician Brian Eno 'began his career as a visual artist and has always been interested in the synthesis of sound and image. 77 Million Paintings is an ever-evolving audio-visual installation that continues this creative exploration.' So today we recommend this Fringe exhibition - Jonathan's review describes it wonderfully:

"The cultural highlight was a trip to Brighton’s lovely Fabrica gallery, which for the duration of the Festival is hosting an exhibition by the season’s curator, Brian Eno. Rather misleadingly titled ‘77 Million Paintings’, the show actually focuses on one piece – a large, evolving graphic up on a large screen at the far end of the dark church.

The same aesthetic which drives much of Eno’s music is apparent in the work; it is neither instantly rewarding nor demanding, but instead a kind of slow, transformative experience for which the term ‘ambient’ (traditionally used to characterise much of Eno’s music) remains the best descriptive term I can conjure up.

It’s essentially a series of locked geometric shapes which move through a range of patterns and colours in a sequence determined by ‘generative software’ which is capable – as the title of the piece suggests – of 77 million possible permutations (which would take, apparently, over a thousand years to unfold). The transformations are slow but remarkably evocative.

Sat concentrating for ten minutes I was only dimly aware of perceptible changes, but when a conversation with Deb and Will distracted me from the screen for no more than sixty seconds and I returned my gaze to the ‘painting’, I found it had changed hugely. Such is the effect of the slow process of gradual change – I thought of the face of someone you love and see every day, which seems unchanging, and the shock of encountering friends with whom you’ve lost touch, and who you find much altered (as altered, presumably, as you are).

It’s hard to describe a work of art without showing it, and pointless to show a still of a work of art without being able to demonstrate the very movement which gives it purpose. So here’s a proposal, instead.

Imagine yourself sat in a church, half-dozing, glancing down at the cobbled floor. As the sun progresses slowly across the sky outside, light catches panes of the stained glass windows high above, and casts a reflection down on the floor in front of you. The light shimmers and shines, ducks behind a cloud, comes up for air. The quality of light changes, and different parts of the window are alternately obscured and revealed. What plays out on the floor in front of you is the combination of chance, nature and design, and it is playing only for you.

If you can imagine that, you might be able to picture Eno’s work. If you like the sound of it, the exhibition is running until the 23rd May.

Co-incidentally, I spent much of the time in the Church sharing a seat with Toby, a mischievous toddler who ultimately ordered me onto the floor so he’d have more space. He told me – and I trust his opinion – that the exhibition was ‘lovely’. He also made me take his socks off and at one point handed his Dad an empty food wrapper and yelled ‘rubbish, rubbish’.

I hope Mr. Eno wasn’t around, mistaking him for a high-voiced critic."


Cost: Free
Dates: 01 - 23 May 2010
Time: 12 noon-8pm throughout the Festival. Late night opening until 11pm on Sat 1 May and Saturday 15 May
Location: Fabrica
Map: here
Information: here

Monday, 25 January 2010

Today's idea - See Music Artist Janek Schaefer at Brighton Uni's Free lectures



Brighton University has free lectures with good arts and media types on Mondays. Generally there's a mix of artists, writers and 'cultural activitists' (a term I suspect extends beyond the criteria of a G20 protester). Today's speaker is Polish/Canadian/English Janek Schaefer who's made a name for himself playing with sounds.

He's essentially a sound 'collager' which sounds slightly like an artsy DJ to me. Perhaps I'm wrong. He first made his name with a sound-activated dictaphone which he sent through the post, gathering sounds and bits and bobs. Since then he's done a host of installations, soundtracks for exhibitions, and concerts using his self built/invented record players. He's given performances, lectures and exhibitions at grand-sounding places include Tate Modern (which seems quite an appropriate home for this sort of thing) and Sydney Opera House, amongst others. There's also grand-sounding awards, like The British Composer of the Year for Sonic Art and some others which are also long in title.

"His concerts and installations explore the spatial and architectural aspect that sound can evoke and the twisting of technology. Hybrid analogue and digital techniques are used to manipulate field recordings with live modified vinyl and found sound to create evocative and involving environments."

Today he's giving a FREE talk that's open to the public. It's a 12noon-1pm presentation, with half an hour of Q&A after. It's at the Salis Benney Theatre - where you can also nose around Emma Stibbon's Stadtlandschaften exhibition that's still going on (and also free). Find it here on Google Maps.