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	<title>Networked Music Review</title>
	<link>http://turbulence.org/networked_music_review</link>
	<description>Emerging networked sound and musical explorations</description>
	<pubDate>Thu, 09 Feb 2012 16:42:36 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>Right Here, Right Now - HC Gilje&#8217;s Networks of Specificity</title>
		<link>http://turbulence.org/networked_music_review/2010/01/10/right-here-right-now-hc-giljes-networks-of-specificity/</link>
		<comments>http://turbulence.org/networked_music_review/2010/01/10/right-here-right-now-hc-giljes-networks-of-specificity/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 10 Jan 2010 21:39:08 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>jo</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[networked]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[video]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Posted by Mitchell Whitelaw on Teeming Void: This essay was commissioned by Hordaland Kunstsenter in Bergen, Norway, to coincide with HC Gilje&#8217;s solo exhibition blink (video below). It looks at Gilje&#8217;s recent work - which spans audiovisual installation, performance, hardware, and networked forms - through the notion of specificity (developed earlier here).




blink (hc gilje 2009) [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Posted by <strong>Mitchell Whitelaw</strong> on <a href="http://teemingvoid.blogspot.com/2009/10/right-here-right-now-hc-giljes-networks.html">Teeming Void</a>: <em>This essay was commissioned by <a href="http://www.kunstsenter.no/">Hordaland Kunstsenter</a> in Bergen, Norway, to coincide with HC Gilje&#8217;s solo exhibition blink (video below). It looks at Gilje&#8217;s recent work - which spans audiovisual installation, performance, hardware, and networked forms - through the notion of specificity (developed earlier <a href="http://teemingvoid.blogspot.com/2008/08/aspects-of-transmateriality-specificity.html">here</a>).</em></p>
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<p><a href="http://vimeo.com/7066012">blink (hc gilje 2009)</a> from <a href="http://vimeo.com/hcgilje">hc gilje</a> on <a href="http://vimeo.com">Vimeo</a>.</p>
<p>The digital network, where we all spend ever more of our time, is a vast infrastructure of <em>generality</em>. It deploys a system which is standardised, formally defined, highly structured, and internally consistent. If I send you an email, I do it trusting that the interlinked systems of hard- and software, the protocols for data encoding and transmission, the network switches and servers, will all hold together so that the email you receive is the same as the one I sent. Perhaps I&#8217;m in Australia, and you are in Norway: we could say that the network <em>generalises</em> our two points in space - for the network, they are the same. As I draft my email it exists as a pattern of voltages and magnetic flux inside my computer. To transmit that pattern effectively, the digital network must erase or resist any local errors or inconsistencies that it might encounter along the way, so that it <em>does not matter</em> if the pattern travels by optical fibre or copper, or in radio waves, or if a boat anchor cut through a cable near Indonesia. It does not matter that your computer is made of different atoms to mine. Those are <em><a href="http://teemingvoid.blogspot.com/2008/08/aspects-of-transmateriality-specificity.html">specificities</a></em> - local, material events and instances. Digital culture, and networked space, absorbs specificities, compensates for them, rectifies them into generality. Wireless broadband and mobile computing make us into human nodes, bathing in shared connective protocols.</p>
<p>The aesthetics of digital media flow from a related generality, where sound and image are encoded as fields of data. If a pixel is a number, an image is a grid of pixels, video a stream of images, and each of these numbers can take any value at all, then formally, an aesthetics of digital video is only a matter of finding the right values - fishing around in a space containing <em>all possible</em> digital video. If digital media creates this generalised space, <em>anything at all</em>, the media arts are faced with unavoidable questions: not only what to make - which values to choose, but how to choose them, and why?</p>
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<p><a href="http://vimeo.com/3333080">242.pilots live in bruxelles (2002)</a> from <a href="http://vimeo.com/hcgilje">hc gilje</a> on <a href="http://vimeo.com">Vimeo</a>.</p>
<p>HC Gilje&#8217;s work arises from a moment when the anything-at-all of digital video was just opening up, thanks to a combination of new real-time tools, cheap computing power, and some key interdisciplinary influences. Drawing on experimental sound and music, improvisation and performance became important solutions; working live in a specific situation, artists would gather, process, generate, and recombine material. In work from the late 1990s and early 2000s, from Gilje and his collaborators in <a href="http://retnull.com/242pilots/">242.pilots</a>, as well as video ensembles such as <a href="http://www.granularsynthesis.info/ns/index.php">Granular Synthesis</a> and Skot, the result is abstract and intense, a flow of layered digital texture. In performance it saturates the body and senses; big screens, big speakers. Instead of the narrative transport of cinema, which takes us somewhere else, this work creates - and is created in - an intensified sense of presence, what Gilje <a href="http://www.bek.no/%7Ehc/text_html/getreal_txt.htm">calls</a> an &#8220;extended now&#8221;. This methodology is vital; it focuses the open-ended generality of digital media in to a point: on <em>this</em>, rather than <em>anything-at-all</em>.</p>
<p>This moment relies on a circuit, a close coupling between artist and media; data flows become experienced events - sounds and images - which in turn inform new data flows, and so on. Audience and performers share a digital-material situation. The <a href="http://hcgilje.wordpress.com/2007/04/29/nodio-1st-generation/">specificity</a> of digital media comes forward; for of course these media are always specific, always local, always embodied; but that specificity is usually suppressed by the functional logic of generality. At the same time though, the processes underway here depend on exactly that generality, on the machine&#8217;s ability to rapidly transform data and shift it between instantiations - from the voltages in video memory to the patterns of projected light.</p>
<p>In <a href="http://hcgilje.wordpress.com/2007/04/29/nodio-1st-generation/">nodio</a> (2005-) Gilje creates a system of networked audiovisual nodes that process and share image material. Each node generates sound derived from its image, in a process of automatic translation. On one hand this translation is another demonstration of the abstract pliability of the digital - its ability to transform anything into anything (<em>generality</em>); on the other, its tight audiovisual correpondences generate sparks of material intensity - real events, rather than digital effects (<em>specificity</em>). With these distributed nodes Gilje deploys audiovisual materials in space, creating flows and juxtapositions that function as dynamic sculpture. Of course the formal model of <em>nodio</em> echoes our most ubiquitous generalising paradigm: the network. Once again, the artist applies this digital tendency for generalisation in order to cultivate instances of specificity - the texture and sensation of the here and now.</p>
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<p><a href="http://vimeo.com/3575068">drifter (hc gilje 2006)</a> from <a href="http://vimeo.com/hcgilje">hc gilje</a> on <a href="http://vimeo.com">Vimeo</a>.</p>
<p>From <em><a href="http://hcgilje.wordpress.com/2007/04/29/drifter/">drifter</a></em> (2006) (above) to <a href="http://hcgilje.wordpress.com/2007/04/29/dense/"><em>dense</em></a> (2006) and <em><a href="http://hcgilje.wordpress.com/2008/10/31/shift-v2-relief-projection-installation/">shift</a></em> (2008) (below), Gilje&#8217;s audiovisual nodes map out a developing exploration of specificity. <em>drifter</em> deploys standard computer hardware, formed into sculptural modules; in passing material between nodes Gilje begins to break the frame of the screen, creating an implicit inter-space. In <em>dense</em>, the hardware moves out of the sculptural field, and the screen is further deconstructed. Instead of the frontal configuration of the cinema / computer, these suspended fabric strips are illuminated from both sides with a video &#8220;weave&#8221;. The familiar architecture of the screen as a blank (general-purpose) substrate containing or supporting image content, is reconfigured here; the specific materialities of screen and content overlap. Even more so in <em>shift</em>, where the nodes are now wooden boxes, illuminated with precisely controlled video projections. As in earlier <em>nodio</em> works sound and image are directly related. Here Gilje extends this fusion to the sculptural objects; each node is also its own speaker-box, so that the digital articulation of sound and image is realised, and grounded materially, in the nodes themselves.</p>
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<p><a href="http://vimeo.com/1660580">shift v1, prototype (hc gilje 2008)</a> from <a href="http://vimeo.com/hcgilje">hc gilje</a> on <a href="http://vimeo.com">Vimeo</a>.</p>
<p>These works drive towards a spatial materialisation of audiovisuals: dynamic constellations of AV intensity, fields for what Gilje <a href="http://hcgilje.wordpress.com/2007/04/29/nodio-1st-generation/">calls</a> &#8220;audiovisual powerchords&#8221;. The projectors, speakers and networks of the nodio works present one means to this end, deploying existing media technologies. Again we find an interplay of generality and specificity, as Gilje adapts generalising systems - projectors, computers, networks - to realise materialised instances. The <a href="http://hcgilje.wordpress.com/2008/09/04/wind-up-birds/">Wind-up Birds</a> (2008) (below) represent another angle of approach; Gilje sets video aside, and creates materialised, local, sculpturally autonomous nodes from electronic and mechanical materials. In these robotic woodpeckers digital media and sculptural embodiment are further enmeshed. The birds communicate using digital radio, and their behaviour is programmed in a custom chip; but their sound is simply percussion - a mechanical switch, tapping on a specially constructed wooden slit-drum. Again this is specificity over generality: a loudspeaker is an acoustic shape-shifter, a technology which promises <em>any sound</em>, in the same way that the screen promises <em>any image</em>. By contrast the <em>Birds</em> produce only one sound, <em>their sound</em>, a specific conjunction of solenoid, timber and vibrating air.</p>
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<p><a href="http://vimeo.com/1660414">wind-up birds (hc gilje 2008)</a> from <a href="http://vimeo.com/hcgilje">hc gilje</a> on <a href="http://vimeo.com">Vimeo</a>.</p>
<p>The <em>Birds</em> will run for a month on their own batteries, strapped to trees, calling to each other and any other creatures nearby. These nodes are unplugged: they begin to come away from the technological support system of mains power and the shelter of the gallery or studio, and move out into the world. As in the artist&#8217;s other work the engineering here is inseparable from the artistic agenda; the <em>Birds</em> are in that sense a realisation of Gilje&#8217;s spatial and formal aims, an autonomous constellation of intensities. But they also literally expand from there; where the <em>nodio</em> works explore the composition of spaces within a network of intensities, the <em>Birds</em> move outwards, creating points of intensity in the wild, and evoking a spatial alertness - a way of being in and listening to the world - that extends beyond the well-marked edges of an artwork. The <em>Birds</em> are more like an experimental intervention, a digital-material overlay in a complex field of the living and non-living.</p>
<p>Similarly the <em>Soundpockets</em> works (both 2007) make small sonic interventions in urban spaces, pursuing local intensification and juxtaposition through directional soundbeams and micro-scale radio transmissions. Once again we find this interplay of the general - the anything-at-all of the digital - and the specific, the here and now. The &#8220;extremely local radio stations&#8221; of <em><a href="http://hcgilje.wordpress.com/2008/03/08/soundpocket-2-extremely-local-radio-stations/">Soundpockets 2</a></em> form a sort of folded juxtaposition of three layers: globalised network infrastructures and protocols, the traced or mediated locations of field recordings, and the specific time and place of the transmissions. Just as <a href="http://hcgilje.wordpress.com/2008/03/06/soundpocket-1/">Soundpockets 1</a> uses exotic soundbeam acoustics to perturb urban spaces, <em>Soundpockets 2</em> shows how we can draw in technological infrastructures in order to reconfigure the real environment, creating flows and distributions that form intense moments of difference and specificity.</p>
<p><img src='http://turbulence.org/networked_music_review/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/gilge.jpg' alt='gilge.jpg' />In this reading Gilje&#8217;s work is partly critical. Pursuing specificity, and an intensified, material experience of the here and now, it pushes against the generalising tendencies of digital media. By the functional logic of the network, each node is formally identical, and must be effectively insulated from its environment. Ubiquitous computing promises us &#8220;everyware&#8221; - total connectivity, the complete interpenetration of the network and our lived environment [2]. But if the network is a generalising force, if it erases differences between places, what will life in &#8220;everyware&#8221; be like? Gilje&#8217;s work suggests a utopian alternative: networks that are always local in time and space; nodes of right here, right now. Gilje&#8217;s work strives for what Hans Gumbrecht <a href="http://teemingvoid.blogspot.com/2007/10/notes-on-gumbrechts-production-of.html">calls</a> &#8220;presence&#8221;; a way of knowing the world that is characterised by intense moments of encounter or revelation - aesthetic experiences that place us in the world, and of it, rather than observing from the intellectual distance of interpretation.</p>
<p>The beauty of Gilje&#8217;s work though is that it not only suggests this prospect, but demonstrates it, makes it happen; and in that sense the work is constructive, rather than critical. In emphasising the specificity of media technologies, Gilje&#8217;s work shows us a different way to frame those technologies; as always material, always in the world with us - a view I have called <a href="http://teemingvoid.blogspot.com/search/label/transmateriality">transmateriality</a>. As Matthew Kirschenbaum <a href="http://www.otal.umd.edu/%7Emgk/blog/LeavesATrace.pdf">writes</a>, &#8220;computers &#8230; are material machines dedicated to propagating a behavioral illusion, or call it a working model, of immateriality.&#8221; Gilje shows us both sides of this statement, the functional illusion - generality - and its material foundation - specificity. It shows us a way to reframe the network, too; as always local, always specific; a tangle of real flows and propagating patterns; and endless possible ways of reconnecting the world with itself. Finally Gilje shows us one crucial role for the artist, in this context: seeking out configurations that intensify, rather than dilute, our sense of being in the world.</p>
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		<title>Live Stage: Voice &#038; Void [Innsbruck]</title>
		<link>http://turbulence.org/networked_music_review/2008/04/16/live-stage-voice-void-innsbruck/</link>
		<comments>http://turbulence.org/networked_music_review/2008/04/16/live-stage-voice-void-innsbruck/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 16 Apr 2008 19:20:52 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>jo</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[sound]]></category>

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		<category><![CDATA[voice]]></category>

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		<category><![CDATA[presence]]></category>

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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://transition.turbulence.org/networked_music_review/2008/04/16/live-stage-voice-void-innsbruck/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Voice &#038; Void -Rachel Berwick, Joseph Beuys / Ute Klophaus, Janet Cardiff and George Bures Miller, John Cage, VALIE EXPORT, Anna Gaskell, Asta Grőting, Christian Marclay, Melik Ohanian, Hans Schabus, Nedko Solakov, Julianne Swartz, Cerith Wyn Evans :: April 19 - June 8, 2008 :: Opening: April 18, 2008; 7:00 pm :: Galerie im Taxispalais, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src='http://transition.turbulence.org/networked_music_review/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/voicevoid.jpg' alt='voicevoid.jpg' /><strong>Voice &#038; Void</strong> <em>-Rachel Berwick, Joseph Beuys / Ute Klophaus, Janet Cardiff and George Bures Miller, John Cage, VALIE EXPORT, Anna Gaskell, Asta Grőting, Christian Marclay, Melik Ohanian, Hans Schabus, Nedko Solakov, Julianne Swartz, Cerith Wyn Evans</em> :: April 19 - June 8, 2008 :: Opening: April 18, 2008; 7:00 pm :: <a href="http://www.galerieimtaxispalais.at">Galerie im Taxispalais</a>, Maria-Theresien-Str. 45, A-6020 Innsbruck, Austria.</p>
<p>The group show <strong>Voice &#038; Void</strong> is dedicated to the representation of the human voice – and its absence – in the visual arts. The voice and its fading away, speech and the loss of speech, both the presence and the immateriality of the voice, the relation between the voice and corporeality as well as sound and image are only a few of the many aspects addressed in this exhibition.</p>
<p>The exhibition studies the effects of a sensual perception being replaced by another one and the conditions under which the voice allows itself to be imparted by other means – be it written notation, technical recordings or visual representation. While the voice has very specific qualities in its immediate expression, &#8220;translated into another medium, the voice becomes apparent as a medium.&#8221; (Thomas Trummer) The works allude to the relation of image and sound so that they reciprocally define the specific characteristics of imagery and sound, either underscoring or even subverting each other.</p>
<p>The exhibition comprises thirteen very different approaches to &#8220;voice and void&#8221;. Historical points of reference include Joseph Beuys&#8221; legendary performance &#8220;How to Explain Pictures to a Dead Hare&#8221;(1965) which is featured in Ute Klophaus&#8221; photographs; John Cage&#8221;s text sheets titled &#8220;Lecture on Nothing (Silence)&#8221; (1959) where acoustics of a silence imbued with &#8220;presence&#8221; is implemented both verbally and visually by means of text notations; and VALIE EXPORT&#8221;s &#8220;Tonfilm&#8221; (Sound film) from 1969, showing the draft for a performance in which the voice is manipulated by means of technological interventions in the glottis and the ear.</p>
<p>These early works are followed by a row of contemporary studies on the phenomenon of the voice – also touching upon its absence. One work, by American artist Rachel Berwick, is an installation with two live parrots. In his journey through South America in 1799 explorer Alexander von Humboldt discovered a parrot that was the only surviving living creature which could speak the language of the indigenous tribe of the Mayporé. Humboldt documented 40 words of this lost language that is now being reanimated in Berwick&#8217;s work.</p>
<p>In his site-specific installation Hans Schabus refers to the particular acoustic and visual situation of hidden spaces. He makes these spaces accessible to the visitor by transferring them into the exhibition space.</p>
<p>Asta Grőting&#8221;s work revolves around the process of ventroloquism where the performer is no longer just the speaker but also the recipient and interlocutor of his own &#8220;second voice&#8221;.</p>
<p>The exhibition is rounded off by a number of other works by artists such as <em>Janet Cardiff/ Georges Bures Miller, Anna Gaskell, Christian Marclay, Melik Ohanian, Nedko Solakov</em> and <em>Julianne Swartz</em>. They all approach the voice as the vehicle of language, communication and bodily expression.</p>
<p>The curator of the exhibition is Thomas Trummer who developed the project as part of an international fellowship awarded by The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum in Ridgefield, CT (USA) where the exhibition was shown first.</p>
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