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Waterbirds: Migratory Sound Flow

Exposición / Locust Projects / 3852 North Miami Avenue / Miami, Florida, Estados Unidos
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Cuándo:
05 dic de 2023 - 10 feb de 2024

Inauguración:
05 dic de 2023 / 18 a 21 h.

Precio:
Entrada gratuita

Organizada por:
Locust Projects

Artistas participantes:
Tania Candiani

ENLACES OFICIALES
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Etiquetas
Arte sonoro  Arte sonoro en Florida  Instalación  Instalación en Florida  Objeto Artístico  Objeto Artístico en Florida 

       


Descripción de la Exposición

[Miami, FL] Locust Projects presents Waterbirds: Migratory Sound Flow, by Mexican artist Tania Candiani. Interested in language, sound and the afterlife of obsolete technologies, Tania Candiani has created devices that translate images, shapes, and words into sounds and music by repurposing looms, keyboards, typewriters and other old mechanical devices to create wind, chord or percussion instruments. She sees these objects as interfaces between “the soul of the machine” and other types of sensibilities, including human, animal and non-human, and often references ancestral knowledge and stories. For the artist, these devices lie somewhere between science fiction, Victorian steam technology and the latest artificial intelligence and word processing technologies. Waterbirds: Migratory Sound Flow, originally commissioned for the 23rd Biennale of Sydney and curated by José Roca, is a hanging “river” made with tree branches collected from a riverbank in Mexico many of which are also native to South Florida. Referred to by the artist as a “great blood system,” the path of these birds connects hundreds of bodies of water mapped in an installation that consists of a network of sound, air, and water. The system uses handmade reproductions of traditional pre-hispanic aerophones (clay ocarinas, shells, wooden flutes) and, at Locust Projects, includes field recordings of water birds in South Florida to create a continuous and changing chant. The massive, suspended organic shape will be reimagined to respond to Locust Projects' architecture and reflect the waterways and migratory water bird species of the Everglades and South Florida. "Candiani's Waterbirds installation poetically combines nature and technology to reflect on migration, language and intertwined ecosystems through birdsong,” said Lorie Mertes, Executive Director of Locust Projects. “With South Florida, particularly the Everglades, serving as a major stopover on the Atlantic Flyway for migratory birds, Tania’s work is poignantly relevant here and provides a massive visual of the birds' path.” The project explores the idea of traveling territories through sound and crossing living bodies of water linked by the movement of birds: watercourses that resemble a blood or neuronal system to metaphorically reflect on migration, bird language and ecosystems. ABOUT TANIA CANDIANI Tania Candiani (1974) lives and works in Mexico City. One of the central interests in her work is the expanded idea of translation, extended to the experimental field through the use of visual, sound, textual and symbolic languages. She considers the universe of sound and the politics of listening as a tool to amplify and transform perceptions, both human and non-human. A fundamental part of her work is related to feminist policies and practices, understanding them as a communal, affective and ritual experience. Her projects unfold as interconnected bodies of work that start from research work and historical narratives, often from a site specific context. Framed in that storytelling weaving, the moving image, sound and text come together as a recurring language in his practice. The video installation then becomes a place of enunciation of a territory. Her practice involves interdisciplinary work groups and collaborations in various fields, consolidating intersections between art, literature, music, textiles, architecture, science and labor, with an emphasis on ancestral knowledge, it’s techniques and technologies. She is Member of the National System of Art Creators of Mexico; a former recipient of the Guggenheim Fellowship in the Arts, and the Smithsonian Institution Research Grant for Artists, among others. In 2015 she represented Mexico at the 56th Venice Biennale. Her work has been exhibited internationally in museums, institutions and independent spaces, and is part of important public and private collections.


Entrada actualizada el el 13 dic de 2023

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