Guitars, cymbals & zebra finches at the barbican

Céleste Boursier-Mougenot’s installation at the Barbican’s Curve Gallery may be my new favourite interactive art piece. By arranging horizontally mounted amplified Les Paul guitars, cymbals and basses on grassy islands around an airy exhibition space with 40 zebra finches, the Nice-born composer and musician has created a piece that’s equal parts art, music and ornithology.

 

An earlier version of the work was described as a form of aleatoric music, wherein some element of the composition is left to chance and/or dependent on the whim of the performers. These (darker) male and (lighter) female zebra finches flit happily from instrument to instrument, unintentionally playing chords as they go. And according to the Barbican’s description of the work, the gallery visitors are just as important to the resulting soundscapes as the actual performers:

The piece relies on the visitors’ movements around the space, which elicit counter movements by the birds, resulting in a subtle choreography.

What is more, Boursier-Mougenot has tuned the guitars and basses so that whenever a string is touched it produces a clear chord.

         

It’s rather mesmerising watching them go about their business, swinging on hanging guitar leads and bathing merrily in an upturned cymbal filled with water. At one point while I stood watching a male and female meticulously re-arranging a blade on grass on a guitar bridge, a curious male came and hopped onto my shoe. I actually froze a little - possibly due to stage fright as many of the other visitors stopped to watch the encounter - as he pecked at the frayed edges of my ancient Converse*.

aleatoric music in the aviary - getty images

The birds’ welfare has been monitored by the relevant authorities, and gallery visitors are limited to 25 at a time. This makes it quite relaxing as there’s plenty of room to find your own space/performer to watch. The friendly attendant informed me that the birds are happily nesting and even laying eggs (with 63 laid so far), while the Guardian reported their reproductive behaviour even stopped the show last month, when an egg was discovered balancing on one of the guitars.

The Barbican is also hosting a number of events related to the work, including a discussion on birdsong and how it inspires musicians, and an exploration of unexpected places and the nature of sound at the Songlines Family Workshop. If you can’t make it, check the video below.

Céleste Boursier-Mougenot at the Curve, Babican Art Gallery, Silk St, London UK. Free admission (go early to avoid the queues) until 23 May 2010.

*I’ve since read one visitor had an egg laid in her handbag, which I think wins in terms of performer/audience interaction.

<Images from Scopict Le Monde, Harsh Media, Getty, video from the Barbican>

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Japanese fashion showcase at the barbican

issey miyake pleats please

But not for six months.

The wonderful Barbican gallery is now preparing Future Beauty: Japanese Fashion, 1981 - 2011 with works by Issey Miyake (above), Rei Kawakubo, Yohji Yamamoto and many more, to open in October 2010.

Future Beauty will be the first European exhibition of Japanese avant-garde style, and should effectively dispel any myths that Japanese fashion is limited to Lolita goths, school-girl chic, hip-hop wannabes or Japlish prints with over-the-top punk sensibilities.

  japanese schoolgirl & rapper @ flickr

(Rock from Punks? Ok, maybe those two on the left are bad examples as they manage to bridge the gap from overly adorable to too-cool-for-freakin-school).

Back to the Barbican, though… Japanese avant-garde fashion gained notoriety in the 1980s with designers like Rei Kawakubo for Comme des Garcons (CdG) deconstructing how women actually wear clothes.

Kawakubo had a Henry Ford-like feeling toward colour in her early collections,  with a unique ‘three shades of black’ palette..  At the same time, her designs used strange new shapes, such as garments with three sleeves. (So where one woman might put her arm, another might use for her head, thus wearing the piece in a totally different way).

rei kawakubo atomic

Not everyone was impressed with all the dull colours, holes and frayed edges, and CdG’s early collection was dubbed ‘post atomic’ (above) or even ‘Hiroshima chic’.*

jun takahashi window display  jun takahashi window display

Along with Kawakubo and her protégé, Jun Takahashi (above), Japanese avant-garde designers such as Issey Miyake and Yohji Yamamoto continually challenge our notions of beauty and femininity, while presenting fashion as art (or is it the other way around?).

ganryu commes des garcon hats 

Future Beauty will also feature works from CDG luminaries Tao Kurihara and Fumito Ganryu (creator of the amazing trucker caps above), as well as Matohu (who fuse a traditional aesthetic with modern lines), Akira Naka and Mintdesigns, below.



The exhibition will be curated by Japanese fashion historian/director of the Kyoto Costume Institute, Akiko Fukai, who’s written on all things fashion - from early kimonos to  the significance of Sonia Rykiel. She’s planning a comprehensive twenty-year retrospective on avant-garde Japanese fashion, right through to 2011.

And, just when things couldn’t get any cooler, award-winning architect Sou Fujimoto (who’s also an Issey Miyake fan) has been asked to design the exhibition space. Design boom has an interesting interview with Fujimoto where he described his desire to work on a gallery space, along with his love of ‘formless forms’ :

I like to create an in-between-space, therefore my
works are very basic. I’ve designed architecture that is
very simple but looks complex due to its geometric form.

  sou fujimoto house   sou fujimoto house #2

This whole thing sounds awesome, here’s hoping I can remember to attend six months’ from now.

Future Beauty: Japanese Fashion 1981 - 2011 
15 October 2010 – 6 February 2011 
Barbican Art Gallery, London UK

Photo credits: Pleats please/Issey Miyake from Syrup New York, schoolgirl from Colodio, Jun Takahashi from Ribbon Controller, Ganryu CDG trucker caps from Love the Cool, Sou Fujimoto from here on Flickr and any more, please let me know.

*Full marks for creative linguistic criticism!

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