Welcome! Following on from our 1st collaborative project ReSense which we developed at BNMI - Banff Centre for the Arts, we've created a new work called FLAP, details of both works can be found here. Our conversation revolved around whether we could create a work using both the synthetic smells of nature and authentic human smell, and whether the smells from our respective countries would differ.
Welcome! Following on from our 1st collaborative project ReSense which we developed at BNMI - Banff
Wednesday, October 26, 2011
Thursday, September 30, 2010
DETAILED PROJECT DESCRIPTIONS
Sweatshirt
Sweatshirt is a work in progress which we intend to develop during the residency followed by a performance.
The whole of nature is communicating, exchanging information with smell and chemical compounds, constituting an ocean of olfactory information. Could we better understand our times if we could navigate the past 8 years by smell? Sweatshirt questions the effect of fine perfumes made for love and happiness on human behaviour, and the cyphers of perfumes created for love since 2001.
We will create a veil of fragrance that is emitted via electronic circuitry and that will be sequentially added to over the course of a choregraphed walk through the space.
Each of the perfumes are added sequentially to a specially created fragrance- emitting costume. The dancer/performer becomes a transport for the 35 categorised perfumes.
Monday, September 20, 2010
Flap
FLAP explores a more intimate landscape – the landscape of our everyday lives. It asks us to think about the smells that we take for granted in our homes and provides us with a multi-sensory re-visioning of the very humble sock.
FLAP brings two of our individual projects together. It draws on Raewyn’s “PLUME” project, an olfactory investigation, created with Richard Newcomb, a molecular biologist. “Crossing Wires”, the resulting exhibition allowed members of the public to have their socks distilled and encounter science in a new and exciting way. www.crossingwireslab.tumblr.com
Diana’s project, “AUDIO QUILT” was an interactive work reflecting community in a new way using sound and voice. The community’s voices were ‘sewn together in an auditory quilt, allowing them to experience themselves through a different channel, and revealing aspects of their lives and reflecting their community.
Re/Sense
Our exhibition grew out of a notion that, like the bandwidths of light and sound that are beyond unaided human perception, many olfactory signals presented to our senses remain mainly beyond comprehension. Both FLAP and Re-Sense are explorations of the olfactory sense and its place in our landscapes and in our everyday lives.
Our collaboration began in New Plymouth at SCANZ 2005 where we discovered a mutual interest in integrating cross-sensory experience into artwork. Our initial inquiry centred around whether we could consider the landscape as a map of smell and sound?
We began with Raewyn’s research into the colour green. Green was a project about the feelings contained under our skins, analogous to the subterranean layers of the earth’s green cloak. Raewyn collected photographs of different greens in New Plymouth: plants, ground and objects. These images were then transformed into a computerized colour palette, and then into video. Diana utilized a sensor that is sensitive to variations in the tone and intensity within the colour palette to create a responsive frequency generator. She attached her circuit sensor to the computer screen while it displayed the video thereby creating sounds corresponding to the differing greens. The result is an audio/visual sketch of the colour green.
In 2009, we met together again this time in Banff as part of Diana’s Fleck Fellowship. http://www.banffcentre.ca/bnmi/news/archive/2009/fleck-fellow.asp
We again photographed greens in the environment –this time in Banff National Park and inner city Vancouver. We used this material to make a second video of Canadian greens with the idea of projecting both videos on opposite walls, each with its own sensor and audio frequency generator.
Both animated pallets were then shown to the commercial perfumer, Louise Crouch. Louise uses a sophisticated system of number-letter combinations to support her memory of 200-300 perfumery materials. Louise provided us with fragrances which synaesthetically matched the two visual green sequences. The resulting work is Re-Sense.
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