Disonata. Art in Sound until 1980
Across the twentieth century鈥檚 different avant-garde movements, and as the processes through which music freed itself from its own norms moved forward, sound burst forth in different directions in the field of visual arts, coming into its own in hitherto unexplored artistic spaces. Audible phenomena and events became visual materials that could be processed vocally and technically 鈥 on one side, sound arts were mixed with visual arts, coinciding with the technological development of new mediums of sound recording and synthesis; and, on the other, the interest in the soundscapes of industrial and urban modernity, and the sounds of the phonatory body (mouth noises, tongue clicking, different ways of drawing breath, and so on).
Therefore, this exhibition displays a selection of forms, genres, approaches and unique examples as it spans different initiatives that moved beyond pre-defined categories in modern and contemporary art until 1980. The show places the accent on different pivotal moments: the Futurist experience of building instruments to modulate noises; visual artists鈥 fascination with the tape recorder around the midway point of the 20th century; and spatial, musical and multimedia experiments, for instance the Philips Pavilion designed by Le Corbusier and Iannis Xenakis for the Brussels World鈥檚 Fair in 1958.
The repeated questioning of classical music forms is also the subject of a critical revision in the exhibition: from the Dadaists鈥 deployment of non-discursive phenomena 鈥 such as Ursonate by Kurt Schwitters (1932)鈥 the incursion of the visual into the heart of poetry and musical notation, Man Ray鈥檚 unplayable instrument Emak Bakia (1926), and the musique barbare essays of Karel Appel (1963), to the thunderous wail of punk, on the threshold of the 1980s, announcing a 鈥渘on-future鈥.
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Across the twentieth century鈥檚 different avant-garde movements, and as the processes through which music freed itself from its own norms moved forward, sound burst forth in different directions in the field of visual arts, coming into its own in hitherto unexplored artistic spaces. Audible phenomena and events became visual materials that could be processed vocally and technically 鈥 on one side, sound arts were mixed with visual arts, coinciding with the technological development of new mediums of sound recording and synthesis; and, on the other, the interest in the soundscapes of industrial and urban modernity, and the sounds of the phonatory body (mouth noises, tongue clicking, different ways of drawing breath, and so on).
Therefore, this exhibition displays a selection of forms, genres, approaches and unique examples as it spans different initiatives that moved beyond pre-defined categories in modern and contemporary art until 1980. The show places the accent on different pivotal moments: the Futurist experience of building instruments to modulate noises; visual artists鈥 fascination with the tape recorder around the midway point of the 20th century; and spatial, musical and multimedia experiments, for instance the Philips Pavilion designed by Le Corbusier and Iannis Xenakis for the Brussels World鈥檚 Fair in 1958.
The repeated questioning of classical music forms is also the subject of a critical revision in the exhibition: from the Dadaists鈥 deployment of non-discursive phenomena 鈥 such as Ursonate by Kurt Schwitters (1932)鈥 the incursion of the visual into the heart of poetry and musical notation, Man Ray鈥檚 unplayable instrument Emak Bakia (1926), and the musique barbare essays of Karel Appel (1963), to the thunderous wail of punk, on the threshold of the 1980s, announcing a 鈥渘on-future鈥.
Artists on show
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After being closed for nearly three months, the Museo Reina Sof铆a is getting ready to welcome back the public on Saturday June 6th at the usual hour of 10 am, with free entry over the weekend.