LIQUID ARCHITECTURE 9
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photo :: Jen Teo / Plum Industries
Sound. Culture. Australia's premier sound-arts festival Liquid Architecture celebrates its ninth consecutive year with concerts, surround sound presentations, audio-visual and recorded work, exhibitions and installations. Featuring our most imaginative musicians, composers, sound designers and media artists in a sense-specific feast for the ears. |
What is 'Sound Art'?
"For many,
it refers to sound-based art work (or at least art work where the principal
focus is on sound) across the broad gamut of performance, installation and
broadcast contexts, which departs from both traditional musical
instrumentation and notational methods and frequently employs electronic
media. Others may see it as an intersecting space with roots in post-Cageian
music practice, or indeed 'post-phonographic' music practice, and
installation art."
Julian Knowles then
Professor of Music and Head of the School of
Music and Drama at the University of Wollongong, in an article entitled
Sound Practice, Sound Thesis in
RealTime No68,
August / September 2005
What is Liquid Architecture?
Liquid Architecture is a sense specific festival, as opposed to art form specific. Occurring annually since 2000, Liquid Architecture celebrates the diverse methods of sound making and sound theory. It is our belief that listening is a vital activity, and one that is often overlooked within the dominance of visual media in our environment.
What will I hear?
A key objective is the promotion of artists practicing on the periphery of music and sound culture, particularly those with an experimental aesthetic and a critical approach to (media) cultures. The artistic content of the festival focuses upon and privileges sound practice in all its manifestations but, due to the cross disciplinary potential of sound, many other art practices are included in the festival. Liquid Architecture focuses on any and all art forms involving particular emphasis on the auditory, including an exciting mix of musical performance, AV presentations and installation work, along with a strong critical element involving panels, workshops and artist talks.
Who's it for?
Now coming into its ninth consecutive year, Liquid
Architecture strives to combine the fragmented communities in which sound
arts practices occurs, striving for cross disciplinary appreciation and
critique. The practical objective of this strategy is to popularise and
publicise sound culture through greater aggregate audience size and a higher
profile, and to make sound culture more accessible to the community,
particularly to youth and student audiences. Audiences currently include
those engaged with contemporary creative practice, sound arts practitioners,
music industry professionals, electronic music concert goers, academics,
cultural theorists and students (post & undergraduate), youth audiences and
enthusiasts of adventurous popular music.
Liquid Architecture aims to popularise sound culture, particularly with
young/emerging content producers within Australia's active student culture,
in order to build not only future audiences but also future artists. Our
rationale reflects an intense engagement with specialist and broader
cultures, and the desire to make a contribution to those cultures. Sound
practice is often cross disciplinary and the festival should reflect that,
not only in the work presented but in the broad range of audiences it
attracts.
The opportunities to network with national and international artists are an
important means of generating future initiatives and cross cultural
collaborations. The community is being exposed to some of the most exciting
explorations occurring within sound culture that also happen to intersect
with the media and fine arts. The exposure generated by Liquid Architecture
is crucial in developing new audiences for the many discreet sound and
experimental music communities currently operating around the country, and
internationally.
Who's responsible?
Liquid Architecture was born out of the Sound department in the School of Art at RMIT University, Melbourne Australia in collaboration with RMIT Union Arts. The festival is curated by practicing artists; Melbourne based national director Nat Bates assisted by Bianca Durrant, Queensland director Lawrence English from ROOM40, Sydney directors Jen Teo from Plum Industries and Alex White from Electrofringe, Central Victorian director Jacques Soddell from cajid media and Perth based Tura New Music director Tos Mahoney.
This project has been assisted by the Australian Government
through the Australia Council, its
principal arts funding and advisory body.
Touring Australian artists have been assisted by Sound Travellers.
The Queensland season is supported by
Arts Queensland, the Victorian season
by Arts Victoria.
Elke Moltrecht's visit is supported by the
Artist In Residence Program at the RMIT School of Art and the Goethe Institute Australia.
Andrew Pekler and
Marcus Schmickler's visit is supported by the
Goethe Institute Australia.
Cedric Peyronnet (toy.bizarre)'s visit is
supported by the
French Embassy and
Alliance
Francaise.
Rafael Toral's visit is
supported by the Ministerio da Cultura Portugal, Instituto Camoes and DG Artes.
Robert Normandeau's visit is
supported by the Australian Computer Music Association.