Recursive Impulse

So, I was sitting at my desk in the studio this morning and had an outbreak of earworm. You know, one of those bits of music that inexplicably starts looping in your head that you can’t quite identify properly or work out why it has suddenly bubbled up to the surface. After a bit of poking, it clarified itself as being a tiny, very specifically edited snippet of Bowie’s Let’s Dance, that particular edit existing as part of the soundtrack to Plymouth Rock, one of the pieces in Trisha Baga’s current Holiday exhibition at DCA, clearly having sneaked its way into my brain during one of my shifts invigilating in the gallery.

Given that there is another ((echo)) event coming up next week, I thought it might be interesting to respond to the enjoyably measured chaos of the show with an improvised soundwork using the jumpcut  existing soundtrack as an unpredictable input source for a pedals based drone/noise performance.

You can read the proposal below, ((echo)) takes place on Thursday 24th January in the DCA gallery and is free to attend. I hope to see you there.

D

Things that weren’t terrible in 2012, in no particular order:

Berberian Sound Studio (x100), Andy Stott – Luxury Problems, The Outer Church, Shifted – Crossed Paths, Bela Tarr’s Turin Horse, Dredd, The Illuminatus Trilogy, Forward Strategy Group – Labour Division, The ERC 1612 Underture, X-TG – Desertshore/Faet Narok, Glyn Dillon’s The Nao of Brown, Morrison and Burnham bringing it wholesale with Batman Inc., fires and rum out in the country, John Dies At The End, Marconi’s Shipwreck seeming to hit quite a few people’s buttons, the perpetual influence and legacy of Coil and Broadcast, Pye Corner Audio, finally watching F for Fake, Julia Holter – Ekstasis, Maria Minerva – Will Happiness Find Me?, Kevin Eldon Will See You Now, Bill Drummond’s At The Age Of 59, getting into Deleuze + Guittari’s Mille Plateaus, the Flex Mentallo trade finally existing, the Silence! podcast, getting a job at DCA, Sightseers, seeing Stalker on the big screen for the first time, general Broken20 ness and all the artists and people we’ve worked with and have bought stuff, written nice things and generally been supportive towards our activities.

I’m not entirely convinced there’s more but there probably is. Cheers to everyone that’s been supportive of music and art business this year, it’s genuinely meant a lot, here’s to 2013 being less blergh.

Oh, and I could really do with doing a  few more gigs this coming year – I’m pretty cheap, will generally perform for travel, a few rums and a sofa to sleep on, my wack chat is optional. Drop me a line if you want me to come play for you, also prepared to quite enjoyably indulge in themed commissions etc.

Dx

The Slow Collapse Of Dawn

So throughout 2012 it turns out that I’ve written/built/performed/recorded around 6.5 hours of original audio (according to the things that have ended up in my iTunes anyway). To draw some sort of line under this latest chapter of things, I thought I’d put together a curated album’s worth of recent sculptural explorations into internal and conjectured space and as with The Machine Was Already Singing, just put it out there, for free, in an act of ritual exorcism. You can stream or download it below.

The Slow Collapse Of Dawn by Erstlaub

121212

This Wednesday evening sees the opening of 12/12/12 an exhibition of works in progress from MFA in Hub 1, level 5 of the Matthew Building, DJCAD, Dundee.

Join us for an opportunity to see work produced in the first semester of the MFA, some light libations and a chance to meet the artists.

I will be exhibiting The Machine Was Already Singing in as cinematic a format as the space allows, A Map Of Non-Space #1 and a pair of artist publications from the last few months. Hope to see you there.

D

Noise On The Wire

So my recent excursion into internal space, The Machine Was Already Singing was reviewed in the December issue of Wire by Sam Davies. Here’s what was said.

You can stream/download/watch it/view the score here. I’ve also done an exploratory essay of the same title investigating my practice which can be seen here although you need to open it using Adobe Acrobat as there are interactive elements that don’t seem to work outwith that software. The physical edition of the book along with the full video of  the piece will be on display at 121212, an exhibition of MFA works in Hub 1, Matthew Building, Duncan of Jordanstone, Dundee 12th – 14th December 2012.

pp2-7

pp2-3

See more images here.

Finally, what with November being the time of year both Sleazy and Balance left us and the last spectacular transmission from TG dropping, I guess grindy inustrial type business has been in my mind of late, this fell out of my brain the other day, dedicated to the two men who invoked the Goddess to keep us from single vision and Newton’s sleep.

Ind_1 by Erstlaub

D

Maps and Diagrams

Time for a little update on some bits and pieces that have been occurring round these parts I guess. It’s a bit full on, feel free to dip in and out as you like.

Adrift (a drift)

Concept:

‘Position your practice in a critical/theoretical/philosophical/broader art/social context.

Create understanding of your work in relation to research; explore through a process that orbits, and/or penetrates your production.

Consider the art of writing itself; not just as a tool or technique for the translation of ideas or works. Consider your research processes and writing approaches as knowledge production; some people argue that research is embedded in production.

Be conscious of the formal aspects of your writing, experimenting with language and structure, not using text as a simple transfer of ideas.

Think about how a piece can be written to reveal its meaning in different layers, some accessible and some not, depending on the reader’s ability to recognise and follow traces and to use their imagination.’

Execution:

From reading ‘Silence’, a book of lectures and essays by John Cage, who I have been a fan of for some time but never formally studied,  I have finally been motivated to investigate the system of the I-Ching as a divination tool and chance operator generation.

I have taken four headings from The I-Ching or Book of Changes which I feel resonate with my approach to my practice and used the corresponding hexagrams as the method of typesetting the body of the text. This mirrors much of the tone of the written material which focusses on the transience and ephemerality of thought.

In order to avoid a narcisistic tone in attempting to write about my practices in a formal manner, I decided to adopt a conversational tone approaching some of the general methodology, philosophy and investigations that feed into my practice rather than focussing on the specifics of the work I create, the driving concepts or mediums in which I operate and the drawing of explicit influences. Quotes have been used sparingly to provide a counterpoint and open up potential avenues of discourse rather than being used to specifically illustrate points made within the text. These quotes appear at a lesser opacity than the written works highlighting the space between my text and that of my influences although they are still visibly related but exist on slightly different planes.

The centre pages contain a visual piece, at its centre lies the unicursal hexagram, a Thelemic expansion on ‘the endless knot’ around which are placed the 8 possible components of an I-Ching operation, the radiating circles represent ripples of thought expanding outwards from the central point of enlightenment.

The piece has been printed on transparent 110gsm vegetable vellum in order to highlight the mutability and intransience of the words contained in the text. An A5 booklet has been produced in the already established format of NTC Publishing series under which I published works for my degree show which draws on the aesthetics of field guides and produces an enjoyably tactile physical product that is identifiable as part of a collected sequence of works.

adrift2

adrift5

You can view the full .pdf here or more images here.

A Map of Non-Space #1

Concept:

‘These are the towns of light, built from remembered brick, conjectured beam, that stand in Hilbert space, a plane of concept and idea where thought is form. Where the recalled smell of fresh paint upon forgotten stairs is an event in place and time.’

(Alan Moore, The Moon and Serpent Grand Egyptian Theatre of Marvels, 1996)

‘Sur la pavé, la plage’

(anonymous 1968)

I often like to mentally play around within this particular maxim, appropriated by the Situationists after its appearance on the walls of Paris in 1968.

In the spaces between things, inspiration and direction may be found. The mundane and overlooked can be utilised as a vehicle for divination, discovery and perspectival shifts.

By investigating the cracks in the pavement, an unknown and unplanned factor, formed through physical stress, structural or geological inconstenices or weather based erosion, and using this study in a psychocartographic manner, maps of new non-space can be realised, maps of potential and light, inhabited by spectres of our imagination.

Execution:

A series of images were taken of cracked paving slabs and then printed, arranged and rearranged into a collaged layout allowing for the natural continuation of lines and pathways.

Once the selection had been shaped, the images were arranged digitally and a vector map was constructed. Thickness of lines were used to denote main roads and one line logically stood out as a waterway. The map, while devoid of detailed information, suggests the topography of a town or cityscape, the routes can be mentally traversed.

Following the in-depth investigation into non-space that I had undertaken into the Island of Chronacair as part of A Return, I made the conscious decision to leave it as a blank canvas for the viewer to impose their own speculation and detail onto rather than prescribing the information.

This new map, made out of the cracks in the pavement, is then projected onto found material in the form of broken concrete paving slabs creating a discourse of cause and effect, the map of non-space being realised in light, a non-corporeal manifestation of thought back into the medium which brought it into being in the first instance.

Map 1

MoNs5
MoNs4

More images can be viewed here.

I warned you it was going to be a long and rambly one.

D

ECHOES

Man, I’m not sure what’s up with my lapsing into irregular bloggery but I’m forcing myself to write up some recent bits and pieces.

First up I’d like to thank everyone that came along to  my performance at DCA’s ((echo)) a few weeks ago and of course for having the opportunity to do so. It was actually really nice to summon up Erstlaub and for the first time in a fair old while not feel completely drained and wrong afterwards. I had some very nice feedback including an email from Nikolaj (whose Rendezvous the work was made in response to) who is currently working away on a new project somewhere in Turkey on hearing the piece. You can download or listen to it below.

Frequency=Distance/Time by Erstlaub

In other pretty big/interesting news, I recently made around 45 minutes of visual accompaniment for TVO’s performance at The Freaking Royal Albert Hall for his performance of Red Night Variations at Wire’s Rewind Live event. Horrible Slow Techno clogging up the RAH? Don’t mind if we do. You can see an edited little teaser for it below and it may well be avaialble on DVD at some point via Broken20 although my lawyers have yet to discuss my fee with the label (this isn’t true). Big up to TVO for repping ends so spectacularly.

TVO: Red Night Variations (trailer) from Erstlaub on Vimeo.

In MFA news, I’m slowly being driven more and more mental by the endless succession of terrible and inane pop music leaking through the floor of my studio from the DJCAD canteen which can only be part of some long running experimental torture process. Other than that, I’ve just published a booklet in response to ‘Positioning Paper 1’ in which we were asked to write an 800(ish) word piece on us, our research and development practices. Despite the entirely limiting wordcount, I pretty much just let it happen as a stream of conscious approach, inspired by recent poking and prodding at the I-Ching and then packaged it all up in standard NTC Publishing form in an A5 booklet using 160gsm sturdy card for the cover and 110 gsm vegetable vellum to mirror the whimsy, transience and ephemerality contained within the body of the text. Below are some crummy images taken with my blackberry but at some point I should take some real pics. I’ll probably also post up a .pdf on the NTC site once the dust has settled a little.

Other than that it’s all proposals and just churning away at the grindstone.

I won’t leave it so long next time, I know how much you all worry about me.

D

Frequency=Distance/Time

Just a quick post today, I’m writing this from my new MFA studio, entrenched for the first time in my academic sojourn at DJCAD in the Crawford Building (we even have windows and a bit of daylight!).

First order of business is to say thanks to everyone that’s been supportive of Marconi’s Shipwreck, it’s had a staggering bunch of views on Vimeo (about 4000% more than most of my stuff), Broken20 has broken even on production and there have been some really nice words committed to screen about it, all of which I greatly appreciate. Don’t worry, there are still some copies available from here if you missed the hype previously.

Next is a small plug for a (what’s lately sadly become quite a rare) live performance of a brand new work which I’ll be undertaking as part of DCA’s ((Echo)) programme which sees artists respond to works in the current exhibition. I will be performing a new work titled Frequency = Distance/Time in response to Nikolaj Bendix Skyum Larsen’s Rendezvous, a brief/proposal for the work can be seen below.

((Echo)) takes place between 6.30 and 8pm on Thursday 27th September and is a free drop in event. The current DCA exhibition runs until November 18th (and it’s very good and you might get the chance to have a bit of art chat with me if I’m wearing my Gallery Assistant hat that day*).

Until the next time.

D

*My lawyer has advised me to point out that it’s a notional hat and not a physical one although I do have a rather nice black DCA shirt and namebadge which has recently attracted some agreeable compliments.