ed osborn on Sun, 13 May 2001 15:03:50 +0200


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Syndicate: Flying Machines at singuhr-hoergalerie


Flying Machines is an exhibit of several new sound installations by 
Ed Osborn that take advantage of the spaces found in Berlin's 
Parochialkirche which is the home of the singuhr-hoergalerie.  The 
relationships between object and sound, movement and space is the 
central concern of these pieces, which are described below.  The show 
runs through June 10 and images of these pieces can be found at 
http://www.roving.net/installations/installations.html.


Flying Machines (2001)
Flying Machines is a set of sounding objects that have in common the 
movement of fans and their effects in motion and sound on the 
sculptural objects of which they are part.  The primary objects here 
are long mobiles that feature spinning fans suspended below 
delicately balanced speakers, their flowing curves lending them a 
lifelike aura.  A study in gentle motion and organic tones, over time 
they reveal a complex and slowly shifting pattern of movement and 
sound.

Nordmaschine (2001)
In a dimly-lit room a set of small lights fade in and shut off 
repeatedly at varying intervals.  Concurrent with this a set of 
speakers with fans attached to them broadcast long and slowly 
changing tones.  The movement of the fans causes the sounds to 
modulate and a perpetually shifting resonant terrain fluctuates 
around the listener.  By gently shaping an enclosed area with sound 
and light, Nordmaschine functions as a physical meditation on the 
passage of changing energy fields though a space.

LFOs (2001)
Standing for Low Frequency Oscillator or Low Flying Objects, LFO uses 
the main room of the Parochialkirche to broadcast large sounds into a 
large space made from the motion of tiny objects.  The contrast in 
scale between the small and the gigantic is here rendered acute, and 
the acoustic size of the Parochialkirche is brought into sharp relief.

Measure for Measure (2001)
As a way to make an audible measurement of the body in relation to 
architectural spaces I have made numerous recordings of myself 
walking up stairways.  By using binaural microphones to give a 
realistic audio representation of the body space of the stairway, 
these recordings serve as first-person document of physical 
experience and a calibration of that experience to the space where it 
occurred.  In Measure for Measure these recordings are used as the 
source audio material to construct a composition for the stairway 
space of the Parochialekirche. The source recordings come from a 
variety of sources from Berlin and elsewhere; some of the recordings 
are left unadorned, others are processed and reworked. 


May 3 - June 10, 2001
"Flying Machines"
Ed Osborn
singuhr - hoergalerie in parochial
vernissage: Wednesday, May 2 at 6 p.m.
opening hours : Thursday - Sunday, 2 p.m. - 8 p.m.
Long Night:  Sunday, June 10, 2001

Klosterstra?e 67
D-10179 Berlin
Tel/Fax: 0049-30-24724465
<http://www.singuhr.de>http://www.singuhr.de

Subway: #2 train to Klosterstra?e
S-Bahn Station: Alexanderplatz

Presented with the support of the Ev. Georgen-Parochialgemeinde, 
Initiative Neue Musik Berlin, Berliner K?nstlerprogramm des DAAD, 
Elektronisches Studio der TU Berlin.


-- 
Ed Osborn
Berlin, Germany
[email protected]
http://roving.net - all about edo
http://www.auralaura.com - Audio Recordings of Great Works of Art
http://www.soundculture.org - SoundCulture Web Site
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