Monday

Ann Veronica Janssens


 I started looking into sense deprivation when thinking about cutting out all the light inside the room, making the space pitch black so as to focus solely on the breathing playing from speakers. I came across Ann Veronica Janssens Mists of Immediacy on www.installationart.net, and instantly thought of my own work.

Mist of Immediacy is an installation inside a glass cube room containing coloured mist that envelops the audience numbing all the senses. 

"I was standing in nothingness. Blissful, bright, and totally opaque was the space that surrounded me, and that dimmed all sound. Where was I? In a strong literal sense, nowhere. I saw nothing, with my eyes wide open. But whereas the idea of nothing is usually associated with darkness, the dense, impenetrable mist packed into the space, whose limits I could not even guess"
Mieke Bal - Art historial and theorist.






Popped Balloon


On a cold Tuesday morning, I woke up at 5 am to go to the studio in order to film a video inside my almost finished room in a room. The balloon was capable of blowing up to 80cm wide. I had decided to film myself blowing it up with my own breath until the side of the balloon touched the walls of the room. I had to be in the studio by my self so no one would make sounds that would be recorded in the video. This is how that wonderful morning turned out. 


Josie Do Nizza. 2012. Fail.


Room inside a room


I have began building a room inside my studio to play around with sound and projections inside it for my final work of this year. I decided to build a room due to what happened in the year 2 exhibition 'Hairy Sunrise', where my sound work was inaudible. I want to create a room where the audience can come into and experience the sound or projection in a private, intimate place. Hopefully I will be able to make it sound proof in order to block out all sounds that are not coming from inside the room, thus surrounding the spectator with senses. 



Mike Parr





"The idea is that you adjust, you kind of get into synch with me and that the film show you coming into synch with me as an aspect of the point of the work"

- Mike Parr (about 100 Breaths) 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nw0xv__mokY



Breath & Body


I have recently started paying closer attention to the actual sound of breath. On its own rather than accompanied by something else. The video below is a simple documentation of conscious breathing. 



Josie Do Nizza. 2012. Breathing

I also wanted to experiment with other body generated sounds, subtle ones. The sounds which require close attention in other to hear, just like breathing. 


Josie Do Nizza. 2012. Swallow




Paper bag


Looking back on my many balloon experiments, I tried finding another object that could capture breath inside it and allow the breath to shape it. A paper bag in my close proximity seemed perfect. A found object used in our day to day life. I edited the video like I did in a past work to add my own view of it, and focus attention on in and out movements. This way I could experiment with all breaths at once. Slow, calm, deep, short. 



Josie Do Nizza. 2012

Friday


'I think good art makes a person feel individual and conscious. And there is awareness in the moment of the contact with art.'

Gabriel Orozco, (video for Tate Britain)


Marcel Duchamp, Notes on the Infra-Slim//c 1945


A transformer designed to utilize the slight, wasted energies such as:
the excess of pressure on an electric switch
the exhalation of tobacco smoke
the growth of a head of hair, of other body hair and of the nails
the fall of urine or excrement
movements of fear, astonishment, boredom, anger
laughter
dropping of tears
demonstrative gestures of hand, feet, nervous ticks
forbidding glances
falling over with surprise
stretching, yawning, sneezing
ordinary spitting and of blood
vomiting
ejaculation
unruly hair, cowlicks
the sound of nose-blowing, snoring
fainting
whistling, singing
sighs, etc [...]




I heard about Duchamp's Notes on the Infra- Slim in a lecture we had earlier on this year, since then my mind keeps reminding me of this list. I'm interested in it not as a means of passing from the second to the third dimension, but as a list of movements we can never completely control. I highlighted the ones related to breath and air coming in and out of our bodies and thought of a few more:

gasps
burps
cough
hiccups




Johnstone, S (Ed.). (2008) The Everyday: Documents of Contemporary Art. Whitechapel Ventures Limited, London.


Wednesday

Year 2 Studio Exhibition 'Hairy Sunrise'


The year 2 show was held at St David's Church Hall, I chose to exhibit one of my sound works in the space, an unconscious continuos breath. My intention was for the audience to walk around the space wondering where the breathing was coming from, and to roam around looking for it. Or as they experienced other works and encounters they would hear the subtle breathing, sometimes aware of it sometimes not, just like we do and don't acknowledge our own breath everyday. 

Unfortunately during opening night, my work became almost insignificant, due to the large open space, the acoustics and the amount of people interacting. We all know this is usually common with sound works and sound projections on opening nights, but I did not expect for the breathing to be muffled completely. Some people suggested I should have gotten speakers that provided louder sound, but that would have pushed against my ideas and interests around breath. I enjoy the privacy and intimacy of breath, making it loud enough for a gallery opening would not only make it overbearing but it would also intrude on other works. 



St David's Church Hall, Khyber Pass, Auckland. 


The rest of the exhibiting days proved successful since there weren't many noises or sounds coming from anywhere, making it easy to hear the constant breathing. I feel like the space wasn't ideal for this particular piece, it would have worked better in a smaller room and perhaps on its own.









Josie Do Nizza. Untitled (2012). Sound installation.


Janet Cardiff



Janet Cardiff. The Forty Part Motet (2001)


'Forty separately recorded voices are played back through forty speakers strategically placed throughout the space.'

Comments by the artist
"While listening to a concert you are normally seated in front of the choir, in traditional audience position. With this piece I want the audience to be able to experience a piece of music from the viewpoint of the singers. Every performer hears a unique mix of the piece of music. Enabling the audience to move throughout the space allows them to be intimately connected with the voices. It also reveals the piece of music as a changing construct. As well I am interested in how sound may physically construct a space in a sculptural way and how a viewer may choose a path through this physical yet virtual space.

I placed the speakers around the room in an oval so that the listener would be able to really feel the sculptural construction of the piece by Tallis. You can hear the sound move from one choir to another, jumping back and forth, echoing each other and then experience the overwhelming feeling as the sound waves hit you when all of the singers are singing.


Amber, one of my tutors, suggested this piece to me as I spoke to her about my recent inclination towards just sound, rather than sound + video. I find this work really stunning even though I can only imagine what it must be like to move through that room. Being able to move up close to the standing speakers and listen to each singer individually and simultaneously all at once would change the experience completely, wrapping the entire space and audience in waves of sound.

Here is a video documentation of the work at the Venice Architectural Biennale in 2010 

C&C


Curate & Critique is one of the theory assessments this year, where we create our own imaginary exhibition. Five artists (including ourselves) and a exhibiting space need to be chosen, and talked about in a ten minute seminar with a powerpoint presentation.
Whilst researching for possible works to analyse in my seminar I came across Argentinian  collaborative artists Laura Nieves and Flopa Garcia. This piece is called Enteslantentes, in english Breathing Beings, a floor installation composed of electronics and paper. In Laura Nieve’s words -

 ‘Beings that breath and beat constantly. The synchronization being an almost uncomfortable rhythmic perfection, threatening to tear at any moment.’

 The encounter at that given time between audience and work may be to question breath or the everyday due to their repetitive similarities. Breathing Beings seems at first to focus on unchanging routine, however as each paper ‘being’ fills with air and then crumbles back down they discreetly show constant change when new cracks and folds appear on the surface.






#11 "Entes Latentes" - telefe from arteBA on Vimeo.


The other four other works I chose are Gabriel Orozco's Breath On a Piano, Mike Parr's 100 Breaths,  Alicia Frankovich's Slow Dance and my own Synchronise Me.


 Slow Dance. Alicia Frankovich. (2011).
 Engineered mechanism with motor, string and wood.


      Each breath is in ways the same, yet it is changed, whether from physical activity, emotion, health or necessity. There is difference in each breath, and that difference transforms with every new encounter. Alicia Frankovich’s Slow Dance depicts that changing repetition as it rises up and down in a never-ending motion. In constant dialogue with the spectator, not one moment is identical to the last. Slow Dance could be understood as a heavy metaphor of life with its ups and downs, as breaths or as a simple demonstration of movement. That’s what makes it successful when speaking of the encounter between piece and audience, its basic composition allows for almost any context to be applied to it and therefore any person to have an experience with it.



Here are a few images I made to give an idea of what the exhibition I created would look like. The space I chose is El Mirador Gallery in Buenos Aires, Argentina. A non-profit space with is primary focus surrounding contemporary art. 
On the image on the left I have place, Mike Parr's 100 Breaths on the far left wall, Laura Nieves & Flopa Garcias Enteslantentes on the floor space, and my own Synchronise Me in the corner by the stairs. 

 





Synchronise Me
Josie Do Nizza







On the second floor of the gallery I place Alicia Frankovich's Slow Dance (left) and Gabriel Orozco's Breath On a Piano (right). I did this so they would contrast one another Frankovich exploring constant action and Orozco capturing a moment in time, creating a dialogue between presence and absence.