Residency autumn 2016

Marek Pluciennik, Roberto Fusco

Performance 2016, photographer Antti Ahonen

Performance 2020, photographer Antti Ahonen

Edition 2020

Journal 2015, sketch Marek Pluciennik

Floor plan Cable Factory 2020

multisensory

neglected voices

body - retina - vibrations

performative

(Journal 2015)

Paola Livorsi, Juho Laitinen

Project plan 4, 20.9.2016


Imaginary Spaces, Black Box 18.10.2016

Paola Livorsi, concept and sound design, Juho Laitinen cello, voice and sound design, Roberto Pugliese live electronics and sound design, Marek Pluciennik live video, Pasi Pehkonen light design, Timo Pyhälä scenography

 

1. cello and electronics (about 10-15 min.) granular system - talking cello grains around the space - trajectories in space

MAX concatenative synthesis Ircam CataRT

http://imtr.ircam.fr/imtr/CataRT - Description

Image following grain distribution in time

 

2. Swinging microphones from ceiling

To attire people´s attention and invite them to participate by speaking in the mics Spoken voice will trigger cello sounds, played by Catart very small motors, slow pendulum movement es. 8-10 mics

 

3. Audience invited to move around in space

sensitive areas/spaces

cardboard boxes with mics inside (step on, tap) - trigger voices and cello sounds

surfaces with mics inside different reverberation times & filter

ex. 4 areas, 4 objects

switches on off effects - tapping - trigger sounds

tapping on things - different matters, sound qualities, glassy etc.

people invited to play with wireless camera, enclosed in an object

Juho changing position in other part of the hall (in darkness)

 

Path/labyrinth

people to walk on a predetermined path, movement detected with a webcam, people together or distant in space ---> diffusion sounds

 

4. cello and electronics (about 10-15 min.)

cello in another part of the hall

in darkness, projections

 

duration 45´ ca.

 

to book:

2 computers

audio interface

1 mixer

8-10 loudspeakers, plus 6 on roof

10 microphones for drums, hanging + long cables (we´ll provide 12 volt motors to make them swing)

"In this performance, the composer Paola Livorsi, together with Juho Laitinen, Marek Pluciennik, and Roberto Fusco, has created a unique art work that weaves together sound with the infinite parameters of space. Her practice is inspired by composing scores that challenge the traditions of playing music to a passive public.

 

With Imaginary Spaces, Livorsi includes the audience in a sensorial journey that merges sound, image and technology. At the core of the performance is the cellist Juho Laitinen who is accompanied by Livorsi, Marek Pluciennik (processed live cinema) and Viktor Toikkanen (live electronics); together they layer sounds of the cello with voice and imagery. With the addition of audience participation, the ensemble is made complete.

 

The pathway to the spaces of the imaginary is found in the moment the piece is performed; the score of the work will never be the same and is a unique experience each time it comes to life.

 

In the words of Simone Weil:

I am other than I imagine to be

To reduce oneself, to shrink to the point you fill in space and time

Stop time to an instant

It’s a void for us, what we can’t represent nor define.

But this void is fuller than every fullness

To love a stranger as thyself implies: to love thyself as a stranger

Through art is recreated the alliance between body and soul"

 

 Anne Klontz, curator 23.8.2020

Anne Klontz, curator

Marek Pluciennik, Roberto Fusco

Images Paola Livorsi, Marek Pluciennik

Juho Laitinen, cello

made by Ilkka Vainio 1997 / bow Risto Vainio early 1990s

Floor plan Black Box 2016

"I used to take the common stance that the instrument is an extension of one’s own voice. Over time I’ve become more interested in their discrepancies, particularly in regard to what I should do with my voice: what should I say, to whom, and how?

 

I now think the instrument doesn’t have a 'voice'; I can make sounds on and with it instead. I like to ask questions such as: how does friction work? What parts of the instrument are resonating, and in what manner? That way I can get to sounds that interest me."

(Juho Laitinen, interview 9.11.2022)