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Since
the 1950s many new combined forms of art have been developed that
do not fit readily into any of the traditional categories. Two of
the most important of these, environment and kinetics, are closely
enough connected with sculpture to be regarded as branches or offshoots
of sculpture. Actual movement or kineticism is now an important
aspect of sculpture, whereby sculpture, components are moved by
air currents, magnetism, a variety of electro-mechanical devices,
or by the participation of the spectator himself. The aim of most
kinetic sculptures is to make movement an integral part of the design
of sculpture and not merely to impart movement to an already complete
static object. The environmental sculptor also creates new spatial
contexts that no longer confront the spectator as an object, but
surround him so that he moves within it as he might within a stage
set, a garden or an interior. The most common type of environment
is the "room" which may have specially shaped and surfaced
walls, special lighting effects and many different kinds of contents.
Environmental art has tended towards greater concreteness, not by
making a more realistic representation as natural art does, but
by including more of reality itself in the work, by using actual
objects, lighting effects and real items of furniture. Plastic elements
may be combined with music and sound effects, dance, theatrical
spectacles and film to create so called happenings in which real
figures perform on real objects and on the actual environment.
A
combination of environment and kinetics was in evidence in Karachi
recently when an exhibition of a video and sound installation by
Kathy Hinde and Mathew Fairclough was mounted at the VM Gallery.
The exhibition was sponsored by the British Council and VM Gallery
and the surround sound system was courtesy Phillips.
For
our audiences, installation is a fairly new artform and the play
of sound effects even newer. Titled 'One Thousand Words,' this installation
was inspired by the true story of a young Japanese girl. Twelve-year-old
Sadako Sasaki developed leukemia as a result of radiation from the
bombing of Hiroshima. Recalling the Japanese legend that anyone
folding a thousand paper cranes is granted a wish, Sadako began
making origami paper birds. She only managed to fold 644 before
she died - her friends finished the rest so she could be buried
with a thousand. A statue of Sadako holding a golden crane was built
at the Hiroshima Peace Park in memory of her and all the children
who were killed by the atom bomb. Every year on Peace Day, people
from all over the world fold paper cranes and send them to Sadako's
statue.
As part of her residency programme with the VM Gallery, visiting
artist Kathy Hinde has been interacting with children of our local
schools. Together they have managed to fold one thousand origami
paper birds. Strung closely together, they were hung from the ceiling
in the centre of VM Gallery as two paper walls. Fragile, vulnerable
and very tactile, they evoked curiousity. Inevitably one fingered
them and read the messages of peace the children had written on
the wings of the birds. But for a holistic experience one needs
to view the hanging up close and from afar.
Sitting on the benches placed on either end of the gallery,
one actually experiences the calm and peace of a walk in the woods
on a sunny day. A surround sound spatial composition, created from
recordings of larks, spins around the room, creating a wholly natural
environment. The song of the lark is said to have been the only
sound heard on the French battlefield at the end of the First World
War. The side walls were covered with shadowy reflections of dappled
foliage with sunlight streaming through them. Video images of origami
birds being folded, strung together and hung from trees were projected
onto one side of the hanging. Images of paper birds floating down
a river, through reflections of trees, were projected on the other
side of the paper mass. A gap between this hanging was just wide
enough for a person to walk through. The only thing missing was
the leafy smell of a floral or pine-scented freshener to give that
complete feeling of the sights, smells and sounds of a stream in
a woodland grove.
The
adjoining gallery had three smaller installations, more in the nature
of commemorative sites where offerings are laid. Instead of natural
recordings of larks, the sound effects here were metallic as those
of chimes, gongs and temple bells. Likewise, the entire ambience
was that of a temple or shrine.
Installations like these alter the art experience, from just
seeing, to that of viewing, touching, feeling and imagining. The
concept of peace here was not a painted image but a felt experience.
If Kathy is to be credited for her sensitive projection of a fragile
concept, Mathew's sound effects deserve equal acclaim for their
appropriateness and evocation.
Kathy Hinde is a practicing artist from the UK with a sustained
interest in inter-disciplinary work, ranging from video events to
site-specific sculpture, multimedia projection, theatre and dance.
Mathew Fairclough is a sound designer who lectures on electro-accoustic
music and indulges in composition and sound engineering.
This installation is a technology-based art form relying
heavily on current sound and video engineering for outward expression.
The entire rendition was handled very imaginatively in a naturalistic
manner, which appealed to the senses.
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