WITHIN/Infinite Ear
After 3 years of workshops and talks, WITHIN/Infinite Ear was the first presentation of the inquiry Infinite Ear as a space. This article is composed of the exhibition text and of a presentation of the five collections on display.
YOU ARE IN SENTRALBADET, a swimming pool long frequented by the city of Bergen’s residents and visitors. You jump in the pool. When you float in the water your body is caught in its undulations. You feel the variation of these movements and your ears perceive sound trajectories in a different manner. Listening has long been an enigma and certain sages believed the ear housed an ocean. The ocean in your ear moves at the pace of your stride, your red blood cells vibrate at very high-pitched frequencies, your skeleton can conduct vibrations in each part of the body and if a hundred of you were to walk on a bridge at a particular speed you could make it collapse. Water enters your ears and it stays there when you leave the pool. The spiral of the cochlear that transforms air compressions into electric impulsion and enables us to perceive sound is obstructed by the water. You gradually loose your hearing. You feel off kilter and have difficulty making out speech. You search your memory for sonic events. You strain to concentrate. Your attention is focused on the vibrations your whole body perceives, then you understand that the movement around you gives some indication about the sound you can no longer perceive. You see the trajectories of the people around you, you see spaces and groups as sonic forms, sometimes harmonious, sometimes oppressive. You invent a corporeal language that expresses the timbre of your voice which you can no longer hear. You are suddenly more attentive to these sensations despite their having always been there. They alter the way you see and communicate. This leads you to realize that hearing is connected to the other senses and that the relationship between these senses changes from person to person. You use equipment that amplifies and indicates the presence of sound around you. They say a sonic world exists beyond perception, in black holes, photosynthesis, the decomposition of fungi, and that there is no such thing as silence. Now you negotiate all of these sensations to create a music beyond hearing, that undulates like water on the body and on the surface of buildings. Welcome to the Infinite Ear.
The exhibition WITHIN / Infinite Ear proposes spaces to explore, understand and represent the diversity of the hearing experience. Combining the scientific history of hearing with the history of sonic arts and Deaf culture, these sites seek to renew the ways we relate to sound perception. The exhibition consists of a number of collections:
— Musical instruments that have the potential to address both Deaf and hearing persons developed by acoustic instrument makers, speaker designers, software engineers, and musicians who have been working with Tarek Atoui for the past years.
— A series of sonic exercises inspired by somatic practices such as deep listening (Pauline Oliveros), sound massage (Thierry Madiot), silent walk (Myriam Lefkowitz) and fake therapy (Valentina Desideri).
— Recordings of rare and inaudible phenomena displayed in a sonic café called the White Cat. While ordering a drink, one can experience more than thirty different recordings, of such things as: plant decomposition, the snapping sound of pistol shrimps or the collision of two black holes.
— A display of artworks, facsimile and objects from cultural, natural, and history museums that have addressed diverse hearing experiences, including an installation by Alison O’Daniel.
— A varied program of films and videos (documentaries, filmic essays, artists’ videos, and dance performance recordings).
Assembled into one exhibition, these collections create both a social space and a space of production offering diverse listening situations in the forms of a concert venue, a studio, a visual display, a café and a screening room. All together, WITHIN/ Infinite Ear is a para-institution devoted to the diversity of hearing.
Infinite Ear is a project by Council, initiated in collaboration with Tarek Atoui (2013-ongoing).
WITHIN/Infinite Ear
an artistic project of the Bergen Assembly
Sentralbadet, Bergen, Norway
1 September – 1 October 2016
WITHIN
Instruments and performances
conceived by Tarek Atoui
with
Julia Alsarraf
Daniel Araya
Hein B. Bjerck
André Bratten
Johannes Goebel
Mats Lindström
Trond Lossius
Jeffrey M. Lubow
Thierry Madiot
Perrin Meyer
Greg Niemeyer
Alwynne Pritchard
Espen Sommer Eide
Gerhard Stäbler
Pauline Oliveros
Kari Telstad Sundet
WHITE CAT
Café with selection of sound recordings by
Tarek Atoui
Hein B. Bjerk
Chris Chafe
Carl Michael von Hausswolff
Jacob Kirkegaard
Morten Norbye Halvorsen
Eric La Casa
Gareth Lee Paterson
Matthieu Saladin
Minoru Sato
Thomas Tilly
Chris Watson
SENSORIAL PRACTICES
Collective and individual sonic exercises by
Myriam Lefkowitz and Valentina Desideri
Thierry Madiot
Pauline Oliveros and Ione
HEARING MATTERS
Artworks by
Douwe Jan Bakker
Antonia Carrara
Fairy Char
Giovanni Crupi
Aurelien Gamboni and Sandrine Teixido
Dora Garcia
Joseph Grigely
Alexandre Guirkinger
Alison O’Daniel
Baudouin Oosterlynck
Facsimile, documents and video documentation
Items from local collection
FILMS
A selection of films by
Lawrence Abu Hamdan
Robert Ashley
KK Bosse
Jonathan Burrows and Matteo Fargion
Abel Gance
Friedrich A. Kittler
Xavier Le Roy
Christian Marclay
Alison O’Daniel
Simon Ripoll-Hurier
Walter Ruttmann
Myroslav Slaboshpytskyi
Noé Soulier and Jeffrey Mansfield, Andrei Tarkovsky
George W. Veditz
Frederick Wiseman
RESEARCHER AND EDITOR
Ellie Armon Azoulay
Rayya Badran
Flora Katz
Emma Mc Cormick-Goodhart
JUKEBOX SOMMELIER
Don Pippo
SCENOGRAPHY
Conceived and implemented with students from Bergen School of Architecture (BAS)
Based on a first proposal by architect and long-term collaborator Jeffrey Mansfield
Exhibition set up by Jacob Alrø and Terje Sandkjaer Hanssen
COLLABORATING INSTITUTIONS
Artist in Residence Bergen at USF Verftet (AiR Bergen)
Bergen Deaf Society
Bergen School of Architecture (BAS)
BIT20 Ensemble
Ekko Festival
Grieg Academy of University of Bergen Nordahl Grieg High School nyMusikk
CO-PRODUCERS
UC Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive (BAMPFA) & the MATRIX Program for Contemporary Art
Bergen Center for Electronic Arts (BEK)
Galerie Chantal Crousel, Paris
The Curtis R. Priem Experimental Music and Performing Arts Center (EMPAC)
Kvadrat Soft Cells
Meyer Sound
Zentrum für Kunst und Medientechnologie (ZKM)
LOANS FROM MUSEUMS, GALLERIES, COLLECTIONS
Air de Paris, Paris, France
The Deaf Society of Bergen
De Hallen Collection, Harlem, Netherlands
The Maritime Museum of Bergen
The Norwegian Deaf Museum, Trondheim
Paula Cooper Gallery, New York, US
University Museum of Bergen, Cultural History Museum
University Museum of Bergen, Natural History Museum
University of Bergen, Wellcome Collection
Top video : WITHIN/Infinite Ear, Bergen Assembly 2016.
WITHIN / Infinite Ear
Exhibition
WITHIN
—Tarek Atoui
Hearing Matters
—Douwe Jan Bakker, Antonia Carrara, Fairy Char, Giovanni Crupi, Aurelien Gamboni and Sandrine Teixido, Dora Garcia, Joseph Grigely, Alexandre Guirkinger, Alison O’Daniel, Baudouin Oosterlynck, Facsimile, documents and video documentation, Items from local collection
White Cat
— Tarek Atoui, Hein B. Bjerk, Chris Chafe, Carl Michael von Hausswolff, Jacob Kirkegaard, Morten Norbye Halvorsen, Eric La Casa, Gareth Lee Paterson, Matthieu Saladin, Minoru Sato, Thomas Tilly, Chris Watson
Film Programme
— Lawrence Abu Hamdan, Robert Ashley, KK Bosse, Jonathan Burrows and Matteo Fargion, Abel Gance, Friedrich A. Kittler, Xavier Le Roy, Christian Marclay, Alison O’Daniel, Simon Ripoll-Hurier, Walter Ruttmann, Myroslav Slaboshpytskyi, Noé Soulier and Jeffrey Mansfield, Andrei Tarkovsky, George W. Veditz, Frederick Wiseman
A (mis)readers Guide to Listening (Therapies)
—Myriam Lefkowitz and Valentina Desideri, Thierry Madiot, Pauline Oliveros and Ione
Readings
Exhibition booklet
— Council, Tarek Atoui, Bergen Assembly
Why Do you do Things Last Minutes
— Raimundas Malašauskas
Reader
— Emma Mc cormick Goodhart (Ed.)