Tuesday 14 September 2010

Traversal - First Passage screening at Ear Me Now

Traversal - First Passage is to be screened as part of 'Ear Me Now' an evening of performance, film, installation and conversation celebrating and investigating the dialogue between hearing and seeing. Ear Me Now takes place on Friday 17th September, at Second Floor Cafe Netil House, Bocking Street Entrance, E8 3RL, 8pm / doors open 7pm.
















In Traversal - First Passage the image is not constrained to visuality – but it attempts to utter its own existence in the sonic realm. The overarching soundtrack in Traversal is made as ‘visual sound’, an experimental procedure I use that connects with the way sound is transmitted in optical sound films – a process first developed in the 1920’s to allow sound to be synchronized to images in cinematic film. The technique of 'visual sound' that I have developed in this film translates light frequencies, read with a specially designed microphone, into sonic frequencies, which become the film’s abstract and vibrational soundtrack, and in turn offer a non-visual perception of the image.

The idea of the utterance of the image, in Traversal, is literally the graphical inscription of the image running through the projector to external speakers as a kind of activation of the material trace between sign and object. In this journey the sound goes from visible (what we see on the screen), to invisible (sound waves), to the physical (the vibration of tiny hairs in our ears to enable audition), offering a tangible trace and a material connection between object and sign. In this process, no longer satisfied to appear before the eyes, the image translates its being to the sonic realm where it presents itself in a new form of perception, one which looks to conquer the historic dominance of visuality which as Douglas Khan puts it ‘overwhelms aurality in the cultural balance of the senses’.