Rae, Nicola (2015) 'Reciprocal Resonances Refracted, St Petersburg' at the 9th annual CYBERFEST: PATTERNS OF THE MIND. [Show/Exhibition]
Installation film: Reciprocal Resonances Refracted, St Petersburg |
Film: 'The 9th Annual CYBERFEST Opens in St Petersburg' by CYLAND ... |
Catalogue: 9th annual CYBERFEST ( ... (9MB) | Web page - Curatorial text for th ... (317kB) | Press release for the 9th CYBERFE ... (230kB) |
Web page - Hermitage exhibit - CY ... (6MB) |
Type of Research: | Show/Exhibition | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Creators: | Rae, Nicola | ||||||||||
Description: | This installation was curated by CYLAND members Anna Frants and Elena Gubanova to be shown as part of the 9th annual CYBERFEST (Cyber Arts Festival): Patterns of the Mind, at The State Hermitage Museum (Youth Education Centre), St Petersburg, Russia, 25 November - 2 December 2015. Artist Statement In 'Reciprocal Resonances Refracted, St Petersburg version 2015', live sound visualizations were projected onto the walls, activated by audience interaction with many percussion triangles suspended in the space. Initially shown at Palazzo Bembo in a collateral exhibition within the 55th Venice Biennale 2013, the St Petersburg version was curated to be in a much larger room within the State Hermitage Museum, as part of CYBERFEST's 'Patterns of the Mind'. The program Overtone Analyzer allowed interactive sound generation to become visual mark-making through collective, reciprocal sonic improvisation. The increased number of triangles that were suspended in the vaulted space reflected an interest in Russian bell ringing and its collective resonance as visualized zvon. The pronounced angles of the projectors’ placement referenced the dynamism of Russian Constructivist works. Perspex tubes rotated at two revolutions a minute and refracted the sound visualizations into further arcs that amplified perceptions of the sonic space. |
||||||||||
Other Contributors: |
|
||||||||||
Additional Information (Publicly available): | PATTERNS OF THE MIND With the explosion of globalization and cutting-edge communication tools, there has been an emergence of the phenomenon of digital tribalism when artists unite into groups not on the grounds of geography, but rather according to their interests. The predominant characteristic of art tribes throughout time has been the need to share and to communicate ideas, thoughts, observations and views. Digital networks achieve this objective by connecting like-minded members of such new tribes across the continents. As the principal players move around the arena, a self-assembled dynamic network structure emerges that no single player can control. As an example, one could cite Rhizome as a global community that not only unites digital artists, but also aggressively promotes subcategories of the electronic tribes. Just to mention a few: “An internet art aesthetic phenomenon that invokes a pastiche of imagery that ranges from motifs drawn from classical antiquity to computer-generated animation”, “Technology connects us to porn, our partners, and whatever other bodies we might desire”, and here comes the digital age anarchy presented by Simon Poulter in his paper “Anarchy and the Big Society Machine”: «Anarchism in an electronic age defies definition and will always tend towards sets of values or ways of thinking and doing that evolve from tensions in the individual and collective process. We could say that in this respect anarchism is defined as useful tension between community (or state) and self…» Let us consider the fact that the tribalization through electronic media not just impacted artists who are interested in the digital media, but it also changed the social behavior of the entire art community. In this day and age, it is unlikely that somebody would subscribe to a publication that lists art competitions, grants or festivals when it is possible to obtain this information by clicking on your computer screen. In such a manner, the networking becomes a part of traditional art communities. Digital networks have taken tribal behavior to a whole new level of collective consciousness: dynamic self-assembling tribes that come into existence almost instantaneously. Human civilization has gone from local to national and from national to trans-national tribal behavior and congregation enabled by digital catalysts. On the other hand, in our post-post-modern epoch, McLuhan’s other insight becomes important, which is that once the media do the job of man’s individuation and alteration of his environment by “evoking in us their unique ratios of sense perceptions,” what counts is the ability to choose among them to communicate the message. Medium matters, but only up to a point, as a conduit for the message. Patterns of the Mind is an exhibition about the primacy of the artist’s message, in which any medium is only a tool to carry it across. |
||||||||||
Your affiliations with UAL: | Colleges > Camberwell College of Arts Colleges > Chelsea College of Arts Colleges > Wimbledon College of Arts |
||||||||||
Date: | 25 November 2015 | ||||||||||
Funders: | OneMarketData, New York, Pratt Institute, New York, The WYE, Berlin, Ascribe, CEC Artslink, KudaGo | ||||||||||
Related Websites: | http://cyland.org/lab/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/Gaseta_9_Cyberfest.pdf, http://cylandfest.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/Pressrelease-Cyberfest-9eng.pdf, http://cylandfest.com/site/curatorial-text-9/, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bfM1iE43OJw, http://cylandfest.com/site/hermitage-exhibit-9/, http://www.nicolarae.co.uk/projects/sound-frequency%20projects/2015-cyberfest/2015-cyberfest.htm | ||||||||||
Related Websites: | |||||||||||
Related Exhibitions: | PERSONAL STRUCTURES: CULTURE-MIND-BECOMING | ||||||||||
Locations / Venues: | Location From Date To Date The State Hermitage Museum (Youth Education Centre), St Petersburg, Russia. 25 November 2015 2 December 2015 Palazzo Bembo, Riva del Carbon 4793, 30124 Venice, Italy. (Collateral Event during 55th Venice Biennale) 28 May 2013 24 November 2013 |
||||||||||
Material/Media: | Interactive projections x 3 using Sygyt Software sound emission analyzer, acrylic tube x 2, mirror ball motors x 2, Percussian Plus triangles and beaters x 20 . | ||||||||||
Measurements or Duration of item: | Installation exhibited in room: L: 4.1 m x W: 4 m x H: 2.85 m | ||||||||||
Date Deposited: | 13 Jul 2016 16:11 | ||||||||||
Last Modified: | 13 Jul 2016 16:12 | ||||||||||
Item ID: | 10034 | ||||||||||
URI: | https://ualresearchonline.arts.ac.uk/id/eprint/10034 |
Repository Staff Only: item control page | University Staff: Request a correction