Conversations in the Field | Sound Symposium | SAG

Conversations in the Field: Sound, Ecology & Reciprocity

Sound Thinking 2014 Symposium

Surrey Art Gallery
November 15, 12-5 pm

https://www.facebook.com/events/865479696804420/?ref=3&ref_newsfeed_story_type=regular

Can mushrooms make music? What sound does a bog or a canyon make? The Surrey Art Gallery invites you to explore these questions and more with musicians, sound artists, and researchers at its annual Sound Thinking symposium Conversations in the Field: Sound, Ecology, and Reciprocity on Saturday, November 15, 12-5 pm. The event includes a panel discussion, refreshments, and a live performance. Admission is free.

The key speaker and panelists represent a rich diversity of artists who are using sound to actively participate in a “conversation” with the natural world. Avant-garde composer David Dunn is the keynote speaker who is a pioneer of “environmental music.” In 1973, he travelled with three trumpet players to the Grand Canyon where they improvised with the spatial acoustics of rock formations and animals in the Canyon. Dunn lives in Sante Fe, New Mexico where he is the current director of the Art and Science Laboratory.

http://www.thewire.co.uk/audio/tracks/listen_david-dunn-composition

Panelists include Stephanie Loveless, Matt Smith, and Paul Walde who are all Open Sound 2014 exhibiting artists. Paul Walde’s piece Mycolophonia is the latest installation to go up at the Surrey Art Gallery, inspired by the work of the American composer and amateur mushroom enthusiast John Cage. This recording of mushroom spores as they are released into the air invites the listener to contemplate the relationship between music and mushrooms. Matt Smith’s BogScape is a “naturalistic” installation that generates sound from weather data gathering systems located in or near Burns Bog. Stephanie Loveless’s quadraphonic sound installation Cricket, Tree, Crow uses voice to investigate the communication of insect, plant, and animal worlds. These artists will be joined by Jennifer Schine, an award-winning researcher, sound artist, and communication specialist whose ethnographic work explores the aural and oral heritage of British Columbia’s coastal communities. She will be discussing the Broughton Archipelago Sound Retreat project.

This event also features a performance by the Experimental Music Unit comprised of Tina Pearson, George Tzanetakis, and Paul Walde. Gabriel Mindel Saloman and Jordan Strom are the co-conveners.

About Sound Thinking

Founded in 2008, Surrey Art Gallery’s Sound Thinking symposium is an annual one-day event which brings together practitioners and professionals in the field of sound art. The symposium features leading sound artists, scholars, and researchers in the field of sound studies, along with visual artists who use sound as key components of their practice and musicians who experiment with the limits of music and sound.

Surrey Art Gallery

604-501-5566

www.surrey.ca/artgallery

13750 – 88 Avenue, Surrey British Columbia, Canada

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