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== Tentative Title == | == Tentative Title == | ||
voice drop (worktitle of an an ongoing experiment ) | voice drop (worktitle of an an ongoing experiment) | ||
== Introduction == | == Introduction == |
Revision as of 15:39, 6 November 2013
Tentative Title
voice drop (worktitle of an an ongoing experiment)
Introduction
During the past nine months I have been experimenting in different fields, using different approaches and tools. I made a few small projects, exploring these areas. My way of work is observing, collecting and reusing the collected material trough my way way of encoding it and then decoding it again.
In the same framework, during the following months I would like to work on a project that deals with collecting sound. I want to investigate the possibility of collecting voices and sounds in a fragmented way, and then looking into ways of reusing it by rearranging and recombining the fragments. I will collect sound both offline and online, interested in the difference in content. We message and communicate all the time, but this more often happens via text and images and usually among the circle of people we know. Where is sound and voice in our way of communicating. What do we want to say to someone we don't know? Is voice more difficult to leave than text? Is it something we consider transient? Is it still considered to be a personal, intimate object? Does voice make us appear less or more confident, make us less anonymous by revealing gender, age, nationality?
Methodology
In public spaces I will leave an object that invites people passing by to record their voice. The last recorded message will be played back aloud every time someone approaches the object, that will both serve as a way to attract attention and also a way to construct a loose narrative, as it will be the trigger and starting point for the next message. The newly recorded sound becomes the one repeated aloud. The sounds will be stored in the order they were recorded and accessible to listen online.
Online, a website where visitors are asked to leave a recording.
contextualising : dada/ oulipo / cybertext
notes : create structure, rules (score) possibly discover a collaborative narrative / look at difference in content depending on certain tags (location, time, gender...) /
Relation to previous practice
the previous months I have mainly been working in the model of practice-based research. In the second trimester I started my self-direction project, provoked by the subject of signals and code. My approach was towards encoding and decoding simple urban patterns I collected. I photographed streets at night and then taking them as input, I created a visual code from the lit house windows. The code I played on a music box i built myself. The result are minimal, generative compositions of urban activity. I took information of a large scale ( whole streets and their buildings) to reinterpret it and notably descale it into a gentle sound, coming from a small mechanical object. As a continuation of the project and aiming to close the loop I started, I built a discrete but resistant urban installation, aiming to bring the data I processed back to its place of origin – the streets. The melodies are looped in speakers, made of concrete, placed in the city. The speakers, in contrast to the music box are resistant, heavy and keep repeating the otherwise transient moments. This iteration where the translated gentle, almost fragile information (composition) is distributed and preserved was the endpoint of the project and made it a complete piece. Relation of my interest to my previous work described above - ----> This work deals with processes of encoding and decoding and translation of data. It encloses information into tangible objects. Maybe as an unconscious result of my BA studies in photography, I take the position of a viewer, I collect data and use it examine and explore later so it can be the starting point of my work. Work is created during exploring diy strategies, conceptually and physically contrast/different materials and techniques
Practical steps
The steps I will take in the process of developing my work are focused around practice-based research. Similarly I worked throughout my self-directed research during the second and third trimester. I start by building prototypes of small project ideas and doing some related reading at the same time.
My experiments will be documented in my prototyping page aka WORKLOG. The steps, discoveries and results of the works will influence and shape my research.
Key Words / themes
Encoding – Decoding / reinterpreting
Translating and transporting information / taking it from one domain to another, from one place to another
Compressing - Decompressing
Scaling – Descaling
environment - sound
Fascination for making objects
using, mixing / commonplace objects
practice-based research
Tangible
DIY strategies
questions:
exploring, experiencing information from a source different than a computer, screen / a custom, unfamiliar object
sound, voice, shout, whisper, intimacy
voice/anonymity
preserving information in another form ( what happens when data is suddenly gone)
unpredictable behaviour -predictable behaviour // offline-online
how predictability has shifted from the public space to be present online as well did this make us at least unpredictable offline?
unaware (unconscious) collaborations, generative collaborations
a sound map --> a voice map
Relation to a larger context
Performativity
Situationist approaches to psychogeography, urban tactical media and activist strategies of reclaiming the streets.
Works I find related to my interests /practice /method
Georgina Starr - Whistle
Zimoun – sound installations
Michael Kontopoulos - Machines that almost fall over
live open worldwide microphones project started 2006
sound maps ( field recordings) started 2006
References
'Playing with words. The spoken word in artistic practice' Edited by Cathy Lane (2008)
Gregory Bateson 'Steps to an Ecology of Mind' (1972)
Mladen Dolar 'A Voice and Nothing More' (2006)
Yolande Harris, Phd thesis: Scorescapes On Sound Environment and Sonic Consciousness
Dr Hartmut Obendorf, In Search of “Minimalism”— Roving in Art, Music and Elsewhere
The Voice of New Music by Tom Johnson New York City 1972-1982 A collection of articles originally published in the Village Voice MUSIC
++ tech literature
two books by Nicolas Collins Handmade electronic music and Hardware Hacking