Showing posts with label Instrument. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Instrument. Show all posts

Friday, 28 January 2011

Tetsuya Umeda & Kanta Horio

http://www.dorkbot.org/dorkbotvienna/TetsuyaUmeda.jpg

 

"Tetsuya Umeda: Science of Superstition"


A bucket and a mop and a ramshackle assortment of fans and lights — all sprawled across the floor and ceiling of Ota Fine Arts in east Tokyo's Kachidoki area (www.ota.finearts.com) — lie dormant. 

Flick several switches, though, and a chaotic performance ensues, pulleys plunging objects into water-filled trash cans, spinning rotors connecting dangling wires to complete electrical circuits that set off lights and explosions of sound.

Tetsuya Umeda's installations are as much about those sounds as they are about the arrangement of the everyday items he uses. Umeda's main work is the objects' performance, which he helps orchestrate but is never in control of. At Ota, he has assembled four electrical circuits that are connected and trigger one another with unpredictable results: Watch for a while and there is no regular pattern, rather a random escalation of noise, flashes and motion followed by silences.

The artist often performs in rundown buildings with installations that reflect the disorder around them. Ota Fine Arts is one of the smaller spaces that Umeda has used, as was Ota's room at the Art@Agnes art fair in Tokyo this past January. In one of the best presentations in the hotel fair, a pile of feathers in a bedroom, looking as if it had been pulled out of a comforter, would burst into the air when a fan was turned on by an electrical circuit being completed when wires dipped into the tub in the bathroom.

You could attempt a meaningful statement about the unpredictability of these constructions representing the random nature of our existence in the world, but that would be as futile as assigning a particular meaning to life. Probably it's best to just sit back and enjoy the show.

These two Japanese artist occasionally combine Installations with performance/intervention in some of their collaborations together.  It's quite interesting and gives me a lot of ideas of how I can develop my sound sculpture/installations.




Thursday, 29 July 2010

The Small Within the Great

http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3560/3389346481_aba0e2d5de.jpg

An instrument built on a concrete wall, this installation reflects on the survival of information and our participation in that which we observe.
Warning! If using headphones, keep the volume low! This can easily give you ringing in your ears. It is a more or less endless drone derived from data of quantum decay; truly random, but also dependent on the act of observation. The viewer(s) is entwined with the sound in a kind of communication. Largely inspired by David Bohm's ideas of active information and mutual participation. More recordings and information forthcoming on my own website. The recordings on this video in particular are quite aggressive, while at other times the sound can be quite sweet, reminiscent of sitar harmonics. While part of my master's thesis, this exhibition was mainly a proof of concept. Future installations of this work would use a more robust BLDC motor system, as well as proper instrument strings.
by Barrie James Sutcliffe

Tuesday, 27 July 2010

Korg Monotron

http://www.korg.com/uploads/Images/monotoron_TOP_MAIN_634049404600190000.png

I've just bought this online!
The Korg Monotron (based on the MS-20) is similar to my DS-10 but it can do a lot more I hope.

Analog on the go!

Analog synths were once massive, temperamental monsters; but no more! The true analog monotron fits in your pocket and is ready to play – anytime, anyplace. Although small enough to hold in one hand, the amazing monotron delivers ginormous and dazzling sounds. Best of all, it's a blast to play. The controls have been streamlined for ease of use. Concentrating on the most important sound parameters, the panel contains only five knobs and one switch. With this level of simplicity, now anyone can easily enjoy the world of analog synthesizers.

http://www.korg.com/monotron


Monday, 26 July 2010

White Noise Machine

http://www.designboom.com/cms/images/ridhika10/white01.jpg

http://www.designboom.com/cms/images/ridhika10/white04.jpg





White Noise Machine by
Yuri Suzuki.
This machine reminds me of Luigi Russolo's 'Intonarumori'. It was constructed in India and the kids are having so much fun interact with it.