Embodied Art

There was a movement in the art world beginning, people say, in the 1960s, aiming for the dematerialization of the art object. In 1968, Lucy Lippard and John Chandler called this “ultra-conceptual art”; which “emphasizes the thinking process almost exclusively” and “may result in the object becoming wholly obsolete.” This is a conceptual art where concept moves to the foreground, often at the expense of other aesthetic elements. In his book ‘In The Blink Of An Ear’ Seth Kim-Cohen writes, “Art became text based, moving from appearance to conception, from era of taste to era of meaning, from the specific to the generic.”

So in moving from the material to the conceptual I wonder about a further step. As the art object is dematerialized, it still exists as an art object; being a piece of text or a concept, rather than a painting or a music piece. What would be beyond object and concept? It feels impossible to think about.

Kim-Cohen writes “Art is primarily a situation in which one assumes an attitude of reacting to some of one’s awareness of art.” So art as an attitude is about framing: clipping a part of our reality into ‘Art’, and in doing so we get to explore it feverishly, often gazing/listening/experiencing intensely to find a meaning or even an essence. An example of framing is the frame over a canvas, symbolising some kind of importance of what is inside the frame. In dematerialization it has been shown that we can frame something immaterial, something conceptual.

Jean Dubuffet Soil Ornamented with Vegetation, Dead Leaves, Pebbles, Diverse Debris June 1956

I saw a Jean Dubuffet exhibition in the Barbican this year. In this piece, he takes something from the world, soil, and frames it by painting it.

How do we cultivate the attitude of art without an object of reference? How do we move beyond material and conceptual realms through art that encompasses the sensory experience? How do we explore the whole reality feverishly, an experience of the world without framing it in material and conceptual borders?

For example, why did Dubuffet not tell us to go out and look at soil, and experience it as part of a wider reality? As I stared at the painting, my body was conformed to an ettiquette of the gallery space.

Framing = context? Is this the decontextualised sensory experience, an array of light, sound, feeling? It begins to feel like a spiritual experience of connection, oneness, emptiness. In some schools of Buddhism, emptiness is “a mode of perception, a way of looking at experience. It adds nothing to, and takes nothing away from, the raw data of physical and mental events. You look at events in the mind and the senses with no thought of whether there’s anything lying behind them.” (Thanisarro Bhikkhu). There is an idea of oneness beyond the frame of each item. The ‘raw data’ is the sensory experience without context.

Pauline Oliveros, a sound artist and composer, covers a similiar theme in her work. She started a movement called Deep Listening, which she defined it as “listening in as many ways as possible to everything that can possibly be heard all of the time… Deep Listening takes us below the surface of our consciousness and helps to change or dissolve limiting boundaries.” From engaging with her work, we can listen to sounds and let the thought of their source pass by, to be left with the sound itself and the memories and feelings that it inspires, like the ‘raw data’ insinuated by the Buddhist mode of emptiness.

I feel an urge to settle the mind out of intellect, into the body. Art in the body, art as experience. In the era of climate crisis, a disconnect with the natural? world and with eachother, embodied art can awake us into the reality of interdepence: where we rely on wider ecosystems and participate in their survival or destruction. – I feel – the border of my body / not my body is an illusion. I am this planet, I am an expression of life on earth, that being an expression of cosmic intelligence, oneness.

It feels amazing! I am God now!

The deepest experiencing of art is in creating. Pauline Oliveros wanted to spread the practice of Deep Listening, so people can have more creative engagement with the world. As we move away from art being a product to consume and being an experience, I worry that this experience is not equally accessible for everyone. If art practice is an enriching personal journey, why should (only) some people be artists… ?

Daphne Oram writes in “An Individual Note” that modern concerts are designed for the “releasing and excercising of the composer’s and performer’s brain mechanisms… for unclogging their feedback circuits and indulging their rationalising departments.” She requests “Can we also have some music for those not in need of psychiatric treatment?” Last week in Cafe OTO, I gazed at a musician performing improvised sound art thinking of Oram. If the audience is becoming irrelevant, then can we, as artists, try our best to share and facilitate the creative practice for others, to allow others to be artists? In Cafe OTO I wanted the border between performer and audience to disappear and everyone in the room the have the same ecstatic release that the musician was experiencing. I guess it is difficult to avoid a product orientation of art, here in London, in 2021.

Imagine a software that makes a listener a composer and performer. A virtual landscape designed to sound and sing in the preference of the witness. The witness paints a landscape of sound with mind and body. Rather than composed scores, a landscape is composed for the witness to move around in. An autonomist Spotify. An accessible DAW.

Imagine the attiude of art expanding to our whole awareness as an acoustic version of this software.

relational aesthetics, ultra red, after sound, artificial hells, claire bishop, participation documentary, hating peter thatchell documentary

Radical Sound Work

A conversation between David Toop and Adam Parkinson in 2015.

“In the 1970s we called it “sound work,” which I prefer and still use.
One of the reasons for that was a very 1970s idea of aligning
yourself with a worker. We tried to detach ourselves from the art
world (which we were detached from whether we liked it or not) and
also from the music world.” (Toop)

“…sound art to me is problematic for… a number of reasons. One, because it is so closely associated with a
particular world and a particular economy – the art world – and there
are all sorts of reasons why that’s difficult. It puts a strong focus
on the creation of some kind of object…” (Toop)

A rejection of the art world and it’s economy is a rejection of the wider trends and systems that art fits into – consumerism, materialism, capitalism and so on. There is value in sound work being on the peripheral of a society. It maintains a critical viewpoint of the society, like an outsider. (I often imagine humans as pigs, then I am outside and they look ridiculous.) Toop suggests a mutual detatchment “(which we were detached from whether we liked it or not)“, from Sound workers wanting new ways to circulate their work, and from a long established Art world that doesn’t understand sonic practices/sound in art.

I am curious about “whether we liked it or not“. What if they did like it? I wonder if people want to maintain their position as an outsider, if they perhaps need the “mainstream” to prove their own unique character. In this belief of being seperate from the horrors of society we might forget to be self-critical. Deconditioning might be an infinite process and in radical thinking we forget our source, where we came from. As outsiders are we not still fertile with same harmful ideas and approaches to human and non-human, ready to repeat oppression clothed in a new aesthetic?

A quote from ‘Give Up Activism’ by Andrew X – “Revolutionary martyrdom goes together with the identification of some cause separate from one’s own life – an action against
capitalism which identifies capitalism as ‘out there’ in the
City is fundamentally mistaken – the real power of capital
is right here in our everyday lives – we re-create its power
every day because capital is not a thing but a social
relation between people (and hence classes) mediated
by things.

In a way, Toop frames the art world as ‘out there’ in the same way revolutionaries sometimes talk about capitalism. But Toop and his cronies in the 1970s were constructing newness by changing the product-orientation of art, from making art to working on a process. As we claim a critical perspective we must also be constructing – making the world where we can practice our way of thinking.

Culture is like an ocean, radicalising, assimilating, swallowing itself, but we hope in this process there is progress? I appreciate Toop’s point about the process of art rather than an end goal, recognising the impossibility of an ending.

Notes On Francisco López

I listened to an interview with Francisco López at the Red Bull music academy that opened me to new ideas and resonated feelings I have about sound and reality. López is described as a sonicist, composer and bioligist. So I ask, what is sonicism?

In ‘Sonicism I: Against Instrumentalism’, academic Julian Todd writes “Sonicism holds that works are identical just in case they sound exactly alike.” To a sonicist, timbre holds more value in individuating a composition that the instrumentation or instrument used. To an instrumentalist, a piece is different when played with a different instrument, even if the pieces are sonically indistinguishable. To me it seems clear that a difference between sonicism and instrumentalism is the value of sound or sound source: a sonicist values the sound over the source of the sound which proposes a radically new way of seeing/hearing. In agreement, I would add that we make a presumption in considering what the source of the sound is… Does the sound not exist in the perception rather than the instrument ‘out there’? Sonicism is criticising the belief in an external reality being the fundamental or reality, which leads me to one of López’ philosophies behind his work.

López is interested in the sound of a composition. He proposes that a fictional piece aka compositon, can be a more real representation of experience than the material world. He is not interested in recreating the sounds of the material world but instead distorting/adjusting them creatively to reflect a personal reality, one that is subjective, emotional and being perceived. He calls this “the surprise and the unexpected.”

He says that a sound piece is “an open gate into a territory of exploration. It is the resonsibility of the listener to create within that terrain… The most fundamental act of creation when it comes to sound or music is not producing sound, it is listening to sound.” Wowee! A composition is a blank canvas for the listener to interact with and create… This ‘territory of exploration’ is the sound piece created by López. I think the soundscape of the material reality is also a ‘territory of exploration’ and there is constant creative value in our engagement with this world. An ephiphany I had in López’ philosophy is that is it difficult to distinguish the creative value between our perception of the ‘real world’ and art. Perhaps the border is conceptual and unnecessary, the real value or real world is actually in the perception, not in what is being percieved.

Hereby ends some confusion I had about my creative practice. A few months ago I started to hear the environmental soundscape as an artpiece. I became confused in the idea of <em>adding</em> to this soundscape with my music and sound because it already had total value. López’ philosophy makes me feel that the value is not in the materiality but in how it is percieved, so whatever the world is, a sound art composition or walking down a street listening to traffic, the value is applied in the perception. A unique value in created art or compositon is the expression of subjectivity can be shared with other humans.

López has concluded a momentary confusion by proposing new questions, and new confusions emerge. As I place the tips of my fingers on knowing, it is again refuted, I am again lost and unsure about the world.

Hello world!

04/10/21

Today we explored the meaning of Sound Arts. Questions like “what is Sound Arts?” were an instigator to explore ontology and in ontology we question existence and our categorical approach to reality… The lecture was a deconstruction of supposed truths, which I enjoyed since the absurd human world deserves criticism.

A term like Sound Arts can have different meanings to different people so we wonder how viable verabl communication is possible in a subjective reality? Again, exploring the term Sound Arts was a way to explore the wider reality that it’s linguistic and symbolistic values reside in, from a metaphysical perspective. In metaphysics we explore relationships between “mind” and “matter.”

Positionality affects how we experience the world. Our personal backgrounds and identities create a unique lens to absorb the external through our senses, and then percieve it. However, as Milo said, the existence of an objective external is a philosphical assumption. If positionality affects, what is it affecting?

Perhaps we can and will transcend identity to feel a real spiritual connection with other beings and lifeforms. Maybe beyond a conceptual reality all forms of life and matter blend into an ethereal oneness. Beyond identity, category and concept exists the glowing pool of universal conciousness. I like some new age music made by white men, but must we forgive the oppressors?

In the age of identity politics, we are aware that there is a use to categorising experience in the oppressive society. A translation of misery can encourage empathy and a willingness to make social change.

During the lecture, we used dualisms that can be useful to understand the world and even deconstruct other dualisms. I propose that a way to understand Sound Arts can be to seperate the descriptive terms sound arts or sonic arts, with the field of Sound Arts. sonic arts is self explanatory and encompasses any artform using sound. I believe the field of Sound Arts is different because of it’s cultural history, themes and community. It carries specific aesthetics and specific ways of seeing the world. sonic arts could be the empty audio track with a massive potentiality within a frequency and amplitude range. Sound Arts could be the exported audio track that is transient but sounds like itself at the moment of listening. 

The CD cover of Murmer – They Were Dreaming They Were Stones looks similiar to other Sound Arts CDs. It doesn’t look like the Now That’s What I Call Music! CDs. Now that’s what I call Sound Arts!

 

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