Nothing like the sound of cracking glass to make one’s
senses suddenly on edge, even more so if one finds oneself hearing that sound
whilst standing inside a giant domed-glass structure! Though fear-not impending
doom, for this was the sound installation of German born artist, LotharBaumgarten [1944] exhibited in the Palacio de Cristal in Madrid’s Retiro Park.
Phew!
The impressive 22 metres high glass and iron, birdcage-like
structure built in the 19th century to exhibit the flora and fauna
of the Philippines (Spain’s last colony) is now used by the Reina Sofia Gallery
to host temporary exhibitions. Between November 3rd 2016 and April 16th
2017, Lothar Baumgarten’s sound piece, ‘The
ship is going under, the ice is breaking through’ was installed in this
space. Amid the more permanent cultural highlights that Madrid has to offer;
Picasso’s Guernica, Goya, Bosch and Velázquez, I was fortunate enough to
discover and experience this work first-hand.
Firstly, the Palacio de Cristal is a spectacular space.
Architecturally and visually pleasing, like walking inside a giant bird-cage or
greenhouse, one is ever conscious upon stepping inside, that it is made of
glass the surrounding trees and park outside framed from the inside,
outside; greenish tinged light and warmth floods in somehow creating a
phenomenological illusion of filling the vast space that is, other than a few chairs and the
bodies of the people that occupy it, physically empty. Though one cannot escape
the feeling of containment created by the skeletal ribs that form the iron
framework on which that glass is supported, they create their own architecture
of shadows across the floor. It is refreshing to be in a space this big and
imposing yet to have ‘nothing’ in it, and by nothing I mean, no sculptures, no
stuff, no physical things, artefacts or objects which would in some ways only
distract from the grand and interesting visuals of the space itself. In a
capitalist culture obsessed with products and production I feel increasingly
drawn to art that uses existing space, material or subject matter without need
to occupy it with too much (if at all) physical ‘stuff’. I recall Rita
Mcbride’s laser installation within the carnivorous belly of Liverpool’s
Toxteth reservoir and Susan Philpsz’s sound installations under bridges. Pieces
that relate to their context and enhance it, make it accessible and seen with
fresh-eyes without them intruding, adorning or infiltrating the space in a
lumpy or materialistic way. Sound and light animate and create atmosphere or
thought in these places in a far more experiential way.
All this spectacle and I have not even begun writing
about the actual work yet. Though with sound it is perhaps hard to know where
the work begins and ends, is it with the space in which the sound is heard, or
is it the actual sound itself? Probably a combination of both. The ‘sound’ in
this instance being that of cracking ice as it thaws on the Hudson river, New York, where the artist works. It cleverly creates the
illusion, in the context of the Palacio de Cristal, of the sound of glass
breaking, the threat of collapse physically immanent. It is a slow, suspenseful
sound rather than the more immediate sound of the shattering of glass. Given
Baumgarten’s practice of subverting the Westernised view of the world and the
dialectical relationship between nature and culture it is an appropriate use of
sound and context. The context of this Spanish structure built to display and
organise the flora and fauna from the Philippines, a very Westernised construct
and an institute of power, wealth and classification is given a very natural
and dystopian sound piece that threatens to destroy the building itself whilst
mocking us, in that it is all, in fact a hoax. The glass isn’t really breaking but the structures, systems and monuments that we build are in constant flux.
The accompanying pamphlet handed to visitors like myself explains that it
is,
‘a tonal analogy for the crashing stocks and assets of the insatiable
‘shark trading’ of financial markets; it concerns greedy speculation about
unlimited economic growth and the resulting impact on the dramatically changing
global climate.’
Indeed, or perhaps, just as we have recovered from
realising that the glass above our heads is not breaking, an even heavier
foreboding beckons, that this sound; not of glass but ice, becomes the weighty
realisation of the thawing and melting of glaciers and global warming. The
immediate localised threat taken away, the sense of the fragility of a much
greater, global threat, heightened.
“This melting ice is at odds with the sun that
floods the Palacio with light, ...yet there is a logic here too. Something is breaking,
melting, disappearing in plain sight, though it goes unnoticed. Effects of
actions that cannot be seen can be felt and heard elsewhere, even while we
might pretend otherwise. The title of the work speaks explicitly of disaster,
one that has many keen resonances – past and present, real-life and literary,
economic, ecological, social, philosophical and physical disasters – all are
all bound up in this.” –Anneka French
Such is the work of Lothar Baumgarten whom has been
working since the sixties but only just entered my periphery of art knowledge (I
apologise, it is an ever increasing field). I am impressed at how this piece
operates on so many levels, from the bodily effect it has on the viewer (an
initial sense of panic soon replaced by one of laughter or relief) to the
almost political affect it has on the context within which it is meant to
occupy. One of his previous works titled, ‘Unsettled objects’ 1968-70 involved
looking at how ethnographic museums, including an all time favourite of mine,
Pitt Rivers and how they ‘frame the viewer’s perception through the
manner in which their objects are displayed’. I only wish I had known of
this before as it would have been so apt during a project that involved looking
at museum modes of classification at the Somerset Heritage Centre.
For me personally
this work marks a shift in how, perhaps, as I’ve grown older I have become more
critical, more politically and globally conscious, less concerned with the
production of youth, obsessed with making and churning physical artefacts out. Now I feel more conscientious of process
and ‘need’ to make, instead increasingly interested in minimal states, self-sustaining
means of producing and work that responds or highlights to the beauty, intrigue
or nature of what already exists. There was a time when I could never have
dreamed that a mere sound piece alone would move me to such provocations; I am
humbled and pleased that my tastes and understanding of art are ever evolving.
Please watch the video below to hear it for yourself.
Please watch the video below to hear it for yourself.
No comments:
Post a Comment