Playing the Building
Playing the Building
Playing the building is a sound installation in which the infrastructure, the
physical plant of the building, is converted into a giant musical instrument.
Devices are attached to the building structure — to the metal beams and pillars, the
heating pipes, the water pipes — and are used to make these things produce sound.
The activations will be of three types: wind, vibration, striking. The devices do
not produce sound themselves, but they cause the building elements to vibrate,
resonate and oscillate so that the building itself becomes a very large musical
instrument.
David Byrne 2005
Playing Fargfabriken
David has created something whose scope I did not at first see. He has turned the
architecture itself, the space and its construction, into a musical instrument. The
sounds are produced without any amplifiers at all, via vibrations and resonances.
Visitors really will be able to “play the buildingâ€, with harmonies, bass and a
rhythm section at their disposal.
This looks like more than mere coincidence. I can hardly think of a better way to
celebrate our tenth anniversary.
Fargfabriken is no museum. We have no mission to fulfil, handed to us by the
government or the local council. But Fargfabriken is no ordinary art
gallery, either. We have no permanent collection or single sponsor who coughs up
all the cash. Purely on our own survival instincts, we have had to define what we
can contribute in the current social climate, locally in Stockholm as well as in
a broader context. One side of this is what we call our laboratory of the
contemporary. We discovered that the independent cultural platform was a
particularly useful tool for sparking a discussion and engendering debate on a
wide array of issues. We could shoulder a role which other players – the media,
businesses, politicians – cannot, but which they urgently need.
The other side
is precisely what Playing the Building illustrates: we collaborate with artists
and allow them to develop completely new projects, usually of a character which,
for one reason or another, would mak
e them impossible in an ordinary museum or art gallery.
Last year, Doug and Mike
Starn went from twenty years of representing light phenomena through photography to
actually creating light. The year before that, we had Carsten Holler changing
exhibitions every day in order to add yet another element of confusion to the
exhibition phenomenon. And before that, Maurizio Cattelan produced a miniature
Hitler for Fargfabriken and stood him on his own in the large, empty space.
Playing the Building is something more than a site-specific installation. I’m not
quite sure what to call it, but what David Byrne is exhibiting is really
Fargfabriken itself. Only reformulated into a musical instrument. Neither
is it your average sound installation. Somewhere, Jorge Luis Borges is surely
smiling at this opportunity to try a completely new instrument, like a new
alphabet or language. Nobody knows what it may contain – and what music will be
made with it. But everyone is welcome to test its possibilities. All you have to
do is sit yourself down and play the building.
Jan Aman, Director Fargfabriken
Fargfabriken
Lovholmsbrinken 1 SE-117 43 Stockholm Sweden
th-su: noon-6pm