Sep 6 – Oct 13, 2012
bitforms gallery nyc
Opening Reception: Thur, Sep 6, 6:00 – 8:30 PM
Gallery Hours: Tue – Sat, 11:00 AM – 6:00 PM
bitforms gallery is pleased to announce its fourth solo exhibition with Mexican-Canadian artist Rafael Lozano-Hemmer. The exhibition features the United States premiere of two projects: "Voice Array", a participatory environment that debuted last Fall in Sydney, Australia, at the Museum of Contemporary Art; and "Last Breath", which was part of the 11th Bienal de la Habana. Concurrent with the New York exhibition, on September 20, Lozano-Hemmer will also unveil "Open Air", a new commission by the Association for Public Art in Philadelphia.
Since his emergence in the 1990s, Lozano-Hemmer has mixed the disparate fields of digital media, robotics, medical science, performance art, and lived experience into interactive artworks. Probably best known for his large-scale “Antimonuments”, which challenge traditional notions of site-specificity, he focuses on the idea of creating relationship-specific work through connective interfaces. Often employing vanguard technologies, many of his projects utilize robotics, custom software, projections, internet links, cell phones, sensors, LEDs, cameras, and tracking systems.
The communal spaces that Lozano-Hemmer creates are an experiment in public authorship. Technology in his work activates seamless “encounters of art, self and the kinetic force of collective memory,” writes Claudia Arozqueta (Artforum.com, Jan 2012). As a conductor of this experience, he seduces the audience into participation, using tactile sensation, repetition and the simulated presence of an individual.
At the gallery entrance, "Last Breath" is a robotic installation that stores and circulates the breath of a person forever, between a bellows and a brown paper bag. The apparatus is automatically activated 10,000 times per day, the typical respiratory frequency for an adult at rest. With each breath the piece generates quiet sounds from the bellows, the motor and the crackling of the paper bag. The piece also sighs 158 times a day. For the exhibition in New York, the piece is a biometric portrait of Cuban singer Omara Portuondo. A short video of her recording her breath into the device is shown on a small screen mounted to the wall.
Filling the gallery’s far wall, "Voice Array" is a construction for vocal improvisation that uses blinking LEDs and a customized intercom system of audio playback and recording. Capturing hundreds of voices and translating each one into a series of light flashes, the piece stores a unique pattern as a loop in the first light of the array, until the next participant speaks into the intercom. Each new recording is pushed along its long horizontal band of LEDs, as sounds of the voices gradually accumulate. When the first voice reaches the other side of the piece, the participant’s phrase is once again released as sound, punctuated by the staggering pulsation of all the lights in tandem. The ever-changing voices stored by the piece play back through a directional speaker, during moments of less activity.
Specially Commissioned Opening Night Performance:
The exhibition’s opening will feature a performance by vocal percussionist Rahzel, The Godfather of Noyze, who will explore Lozano-Hemmer’s “Voice Array” within the musical context of human beatboxing. Since its beginnings in the early 1980s hip-hop community, beatboxing has played creatively with the interface between machines, the body and music. A direct means of handling rhythm and percussion, it is typically associated with turntablism, mixing, the drum machine, scat and improv.
The collaboration on September 6, 2012, with Lozano-Hemmer’s sound and light sculpture, “Voice Array”, is Rahzel’s first foray into interactive and visual art performance. “Beatboxing really means something to me,” says Rahzel. “The beatbox is like your heart beating, and you can’t really live without a heartbeat.” Initially conceived of as a project that visualizes the human voice and communication, this special performance blends a synchronous light show with Rahzel's dynamic repertoire. It also captures musical elements of dub and improvisation.
Afterward, the sculpture will continue to recycle this material and additionally collect loops of time and light from individual audience members - further blurring the categorical definitions of the stage, intimacy and spectacle. “As people populate the work and speak into it, and ultimately leave their recorded message behind, the project becomes alive. So in this sense, my artistic practice is about crowd-sourcing the content,” says Lozano- Hemmer, "The experience of participation is to reconsider one's notion of community- which is by its very definition, a reductive, essentialist and problematic division.”
About Rafael Lozano-Hemmer:
http://bit.ly/pSbJgx
Full Biography:
http://bit.ly/oxGaDu
Select Bibliography:
http://bit.ly/qqu9oy