Showing posts with label Goldsmiths. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Goldsmiths. Show all posts

Monday, 21 April 2014

Transmètic — 1 May

Modulating between the abstract/(in)aesthetic through the rhythmic/4-to-the-floor and back again, Transmètic is a night of schizo-disciplinary interchange.

Featuring artwork/performance/music by:

Bibliothèque
DJ Big Lasagne
Tim Dixon
|end|
Rachael Finney
Hipofonéticas
it’s la*b
Karaoke Ziensgholt
Leonardo Liccini
Plastique Fantastique
rewot wint
Leonor Serrano-Rivas
So Liar X
Harrie Skully
Neasa Terry
Maria Yashchanka
Xi Xi Zhao Zou
+ More TBC

£3 on the door

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This event is brought to you by students from
Department of (Aural &) Visual Cultures, Goldsmiths

Wednesday, 12 March 2014

Listening Seminar 4 - Sound Works by Women Artists



The MA in Aural and Visual Cultures Presents:
Listening Seminar 4 - Sound Works by Women Artists 

Curated by Diana Policarpo

This seminar will present new audio pieces by a selection of women artists. It features the work of Adrianna Palazzolo, Cara Tolmie, Diana Policarpo, Hannah Catherine Jones, Jenna Bliss, Jenna Collins, Marina Elderton and Nicola Woodham. 

Each of these artists investigate different aspects of sound, in relation to space, atmosphere and the presence or absence of the image. Through a variety of approaches, these works explore notions of multi-vocality, using rhythm, time, formal and informal speech, narrative and noise, both as material and inspiration.

The works have been compiled back-to-back on a playlist, to prioritise collective listening, over discussion. I hope this event, which is married to space and corporeality, will allow us to question the various ways we experience the sonic world. 

Diana Policarpo, 
March, 2014

Adrianna Palazzolo (b. Toronto, Canada) lives and works in London. She graduated with an MFA in Fine Art from Goldsmiths in 2012. Recent group exhibitions include: Emergency6, Aspex, Portsmouth, UK; Adrianna Palazzolo and Ella McCartney, Peter Von Kant, London; .gif, online exhibition, MMOCA (Main Museum of Canadian Contemporary Art); Perspectivism, Slakthusateljéernas, Stockholm, Sweden and Pavilion, Open File, Grand Union Gallery, Birmingham, UK.

Adrianna's practice is largely based on experimentation, focusing in video and installation works. The soundtrack of each of her works are sculptural, where the sound takes precedence over the image in the editing process. This mode of working can be seen as a way to question the patriarchal relationship of sound and image in film making ideologies in direct comparison to feminist politics.


Cara Tolmie is an artist, born in Glasgow currently based in London, who works with moving image, performance, sound and installation. She made two new projects in 2013; Pley, commissioned and produced by Picture This and exhibited at Spike Island, Bristol and Artissima, Turin; and Otiumfold commissioned by Chisenhale Gallery, London and Tower Hamlets. Both used the format of the ‘exercise’ to scrutinise interpersonal relations between groups of performers each navigating their own investigations into play, improvisation and language. She is currently working on new collaborative performances with Patrick Staff for Open File at Outpost, Norwich and Paul Abbott for the Counterflows festival in Glasgow this April. 


Diana Policarpo (b. Lisbon, Portugal), is an artist based in London and recently completed an MFA in Fine Art from Goldsmiths College. Her work can mainly be described as a spatial practice: various media such as drawing, performance, sound, writing and spoken word open up different ways for her to delineate and activate objects and space.

She composes and improvises time-based components for polyrhythmic sound sculptures and performative installations, which deal with the performative role that language and power play, both reflecting on reality and on the trandisciplinary field of cultural production. She is currently working on projects with the female collective Cabiria and her first solo show in Germany will be at the Staatliche Kunsthalle Baden-Baden in July 2014.


Jenna Bliss recently completed an MA at Slade School of Fine Art in London and is now based in New York, NY.  Her current project revolves around the radical political action and drug-free detox at Lincoln Hospital Detoxification Clinic in the South Bronx during the 1970s. 

The audio piece for this listening seminar explores the historical moment and location whilst attempting to utilize the detoxifying capabilities of deep breathing and body heat. The culmination of this project will be a video and series of performances. 


Jenna Collins works across sound, video and text to make visible the ways and means by which the body is continuous with the environment, seeking to reveal the pressures, feedback and aspirations that clutter moments of enunciation. www.jennacollins.com


Hannah Catherine Jones (b. Doncaster 1987) investigates the documentation modes of performance art. Using her (live) operatic voice, she often gives (recorded) vocal presence to documenting devices in the moment of performance. Jones’ investigations into language, specifically her punning titles, have recently enriched her practice. Jones has a BFA and MA from Oxford University, an MFA from Goldsmiths and begins a practice-based PhD at Goldsmiths in September 2014.


Marina Elderton is a self-taught musician based in London. She plays guitar and sings in the two-piece KULL (www.kullmusic.com), and improvises live experimental soundscapes alongside Diana Policarpo and Hannah Jones as part of the female collective Cabiria. 
Drawn to the immersive nature of sound as a mind altering tool, she experiments with raw musical elements, embracing atmospheric minimalism and ritualised cycles to access purer conscious states. She will be playing a song from a new independent piano project C'est Celestial. She is currently studying an MA in Composing for Film at the National Film and Television School. 


Nicola Woodham is a sound, performance and video artist. She creates fictions with the voice as a means to explore forms of surveillance and the notion of the female voice as ‘monstrous’. She recently took part in the Totemic Festival, Freud Museum and FLOWS, Vibe Gallery, London. She is part of a collaborative project Zeros + Ones with artists from Stockholm and London. She also contributes regularly to Electric Sheep film magazine.  www.nicolawoodham.com


The Listening Seminar will take place from 8-10pm on March 25th  at Goldsmiths College in NAB LG01 and it is located in the New Academic building  which is to be found at the rear of the College, behind the quad. 


Tuesday, 22 October 2013

The MA in Aural Visual Cultures at Goldsmiths, University of London presents: Listening Seminars

The MA in Aural Visual Cultures at Goldsmiths, University of London presents: Listening Seminars

The Listening Seminars will be free public events, open to all, presented by the MA in Aural and Visual Cultures at Goldsmiths, University of London. The Seminars will be devoted to the practice of collective listening. What will be listened to will vary, but it is likely to include music, sound art, spoken word and other experimental uses of sound and voice. Sometimes, artists and musicians will be present to describe and contextualise their work, but the primary focus will be on listening together rather than on discussion. The seminars aim to provide the opportunity for sustained focus in a world that is otherwise characterised by the dispersal of attention.

It is hoped that the Listening Seminars will happen monthly during term times.

The first Listening Seminar will take place from 7-9pm on November 5th in NAB LG01, no booking required. NAB LG01 is located in the New Academic Building(http://www.gold.ac.uk/newacademicbuilding/), which is to be found at the rear of the College, behind the quad. It will feature works by Mark Fisher, English Heretic, RO/AD (Carey Robinson, Tristam Adams), Mika Hayashi Ebbesen and special presentation from Jonny Mugwump of recordings from his Exotic Pylon label.

The second Seminar will be a Yule Eerie special and will take place in December, on a date to be confirmed shortly. Anyone who would like to present an audio work at a future Seminar, or who has ideas for pieces to which we could collectively listen, should email m.fisher@gold.ac.uk.

Line-up for the first Listening Seminar

1. Unvisited Vastness - Eerie Anglia (Mark Fisher and Andy Sharp)

2. Plan for the Kidnap of Princess Anne - English Heretic featuring Mark Fisher

3. As Sonorous Murmurs Rise - RO/AD (Carey Robinson, Tristam Adams)

4. Evanescent Continents [1] by Mikatsiu - Mika Hayashi Ebbesen

5. Presentation by Jonny Mugwump of material from Exotic Pylon label

Biographies and descriptions of pieces

Plan For The Kidnap Of Princess Anne - English Heretic

Using found recordings, a research group from English Heretic have reconstructed the attempted kidnap of Princess Anne by Ian Ball. On the evening of March 20th 1974 Princess Anne and Captain Mark Phillips were returning from a charity film event in support of The Riding For The Disabled Association, when their limousine was held up along the Mall, by Ball. Eventually tackled by police officers, Ball was arrested. In May 1975, Ball was convicted of attempted murder and kidnap. A diagnosed paranoid-schizophrenic, Ball still remains in detention under the Mental Health Act.

http://englishheretic.blogspot.co.uk/2011/04/plan-for-kidnap-of-princess-anne-lp.html

English Heretic is a creative occult organisation, in operation since 2003. Over 10 years, English Heretic has set out to explore a new approach to ceremonial magic and archetypal psychology inspired by the outre work of Kenneth Grant, James Hillman, situationism and pop culture signifiers. English Heretic attempts to manifest a deliciously troubled soul of our world, through ludic and heuristic engagement with horror film, pulp fiction and the esoteric arts. They have released and reported their findings via numerous books, CDs and events.

Unvisited Vastness - Eerie Anglia

The first piece in the ongoing Eerie Capital series, 'Unvisited Vastness' is also a spin-off from Justin Barton and Mark Fisher's On Vanishing Land audio-essay, which described Felixstowe container port as an 'unvisited vastness'. Using concrete sounds recorded at the port, Eerie Anglia (Mark Fisher and English Heretic's Andy Sharp) have constructed a strange love song to Capital.

Mark Fisher is the author of Capitalist Realism (2009) and the forthcoming Ghosts Of My Life: Writings on Depression, Hauntology and Lost Futures. His writing has appeared in many publications, including The Wire, Frieze, The Guardian and Film Quarterly. He is Programme Leader of the MA in Aural and Visual Cultures at Goldsmiths, University of London and a lecturer at the University of East London. He has also produced two acclaimed audio-essays in collaboration with Justin Barton:londonunderlondon (2005) and On Vanishing Land (2013).

RO/AD - As Sonorous Murmurs Rise

As Sonorous Murmurs Rise explores the elusive grain of the voice; the parts that hold a libidinal energy, a vo-corp-aural energy traded in service industry, media and music. Taking Jean Francois Lyotard’s visceral prose from the 1993 translation of his Libidinal Economy essay as a starting point, the piece trades upon the aesthetic of Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response (ASMR). The ASMR aesthetic is explored and renegotiated to question the preconceptions of such seemingly innocuous sounds. The hope is to conjure an intense vocal undoing; a tangibly sonic and performative deconstruction of voice that may be peculiar, strange or even horrifying. It is in this sense that notions of libidinal vocal capitalism and the traditional apportioning of subordination and domination within service intonations are deconstructed. Framing the narrative will be soundscapes compiled from Carey Robinson’s archive recordings.

RO/AD is a collaborative art practice based in London. It was founded in 2012 by Carey Robinson and Tristam Adams, students of Aural and Visual Cultures at Goldsmiths.

Evanescent Continents [1] by Mikatsiu - Mika Hayashi Ebbesen

Evanescent Continents was launched as an experiment in the ephemeral amassing of sounds. Believing that we all continuously contribute to the frequencies that resonate within our daily existences, these human fictions are the true reality, a reality cut away from what is habitually imposed upon us as real. Using material collected from an international call for recorded material, the listener is presented with a momentary evanescent continent, a shared sonic landscape bound to its temporal rather than spatial existence.

Mika Hayashi Ebbesen is a London based artist & writer. She is an editor at Shoppinghour Magazine and is also the founder of the sonically oriented collective Human Fiction Tartini. Ebbesen makes music under the name Mikatsiu, plays cello in the band Shabsi Mann, and recently joined the Chicago based international theater company Mozawa.

Exotic Pylon Records was formed in August 2011 and is a limb of the (undefined) Exotic Pylon project begun over five years ago by Jonny Mugwump. This is a record label informed by the practices Mugwump stumbled upon as a radio producer at Resonance FM and then via a number of live events that he organised. The label does not have a defined sonic or visual aesthetic (although clearly there are stylistic phases and there is a leaning towards the 'electronic') and has released on a variety of formats so far including tape, vinyl, CD, USB and digital (although nothing is off-limits where appropriate and this should become more varied in the future). Releases might be fully hand-made, industrially manufactured or a mixture of both.

www.exoticpylon.com