(Catalogue no. 17880)

ADD TO CART
Click to add to your cart. You can always remove it later.
|
| Title: |
Attack On SIlence |
| Artist: |
Mark Fell |
|
Label: |
Line |
| Format: |
DVD |
| Price: |
€ 18.90 |
Mp3 samples: none
|
|
Title Description: Attack on Silence brings together a series of works by British artist Mark Fell exploring the relationships between geometry, color, and waveform. These works have been shown around the world as performances, installations, and in print. For the past decade Mark Fell has been one of the leading innovators in the fields of experimental electronic music and sound art. Combining interests in experimental music, contemporary art, computer technology and philosophy, his work has been performed and exhibited internationally to wide critical acclaim. Mark Fell is one half of SND. Sacred geometries, and their sonic equivalents, are said to mirror the micro and macroscopic structures of the physical world; the complex harmonies of the Tibetan singing bowl, like the patterns of the Mandala, allow access to the deepest levels of the consciousness inducing meditative states that transform the very being of their participants. In the modern reciprocals of these technologies the shift is one of teleology. The sacred metals and antique art of the singing bowls give way to the magic of digital synthesis as sacred geometry gives proxy to psychophysiology and the cognitive neuroscience of brainwave entrainment. Drawn from these sourcesÑwith mutual ambivalenceÑand realized through a distinct aesthetic minimalism, intricate combinations of form, color and sound are projected through a series of transitions, sometimes gradual, sometimes abrupt, sometimes giving way to sustained tones and repetitions. In a process of ever-emerging horizonÑan attack on silence and a space for silenceÑthe potential arises to be ensconced or alienated, a space for enchantment, for anxiety, for profound boredom or for reverie. Are these phenomena affirmations or reconfigurations of the subjectÑroutes to an authentic, spiritual or otherwiseÑor are they essentially physiological? Are they aesthetic distractions or intrusive technological interventionsÑpointers to dystopian possibilities? Are we being enlightened? Examined? Entertained? Enmeshed?
Vital Review:
|