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THE SPECTRE AND THE SPHERE 16 MAY - 21 JUN 2008Jesse Jones Curated by Tessa Giblin ExhibitionJesse Jones’ commissioned 16mm film The Spectre and the Sphere evokes the spectres of ideology and amplifies residual voices that haunt the cultural vessels of history.
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Curator's NotesJesse Jones' commissioned 16mm film The Spectre and the Sphere evokes the spectres of ideology and amplifies residual voices that haunt the cultural vessels of history. It examines how the spaces of our popular imagining such as the theatre and the cinema are also containers of historical and political impulses. The Spectre and the Sphere conjures up a particular moment in the early twentieth century through the use of cultural artefacts, imagining the various historical potentialities of the time, and how these residues may be present in our construction of the future.
The Theremin Lydia Kavina "The difference between inhabit and haunt becomes here more ungraspable than ever. Persons are personified by letting themselves be haunted by the very effect of objective haunting, so to speak, that they produce by inhabiting the thing. Persons (guardians or possessors of the thing) are haunted in return, and constitutively, by the haunting they produce in the thing by lodging there their speech and will like inhabitants." Vooruit The Whisper Choir "Two genres, two generations of movement intersect with each other in it, and that is why it figures the apparition of a spectre. It accumulates undecidably, in its uncanniness, their contradictory predicates: the inert thing appears suddenly inspired, it is all at once transfixed by a pneuma or a psyche." Gallery of Cinema "How do you recognise a ghost? By the fact that it does not recognise itself in a mirror. Since all of a sudden [the mirror] no longer plays its role, since it does not reflect back the expected image, those who are looking for themselves can no longer find themselves in it. Men no longer recognise in it the social character of their own labour. It is as if they were becoming ghosts in their turn. These ghosts that are commodities transform human producers into ghosts. And this whole theatrical process (visual, theoretical, but also optical, optician) sets off the effect of a mysterious mirror." - all quotes from What is ideology?, from 'Spectres of Marx' 1994, Jacques Derrida
EventsSix artists’ performances spanning two evenings in Project Arts Centre - Cube. This black box theatre (used mainly for more experimental theatre/dance) is the venue for the performances which somehow alter their characteristics in this environment. Artists are using the space in different ways - combining presentations with film shoots, and performances with workshop development. At what point will common sense prevail by Garrett PhelanPhelan extracts and performs a 'regurgitated monologue' from his At what point will common sense prevail project. This project marks the second phase of a series of works by the artist exploring the 'formation of opinion'. Together with the online sound works, an archive and broadcast mixes of the sound works for radio transmission, performances will be presented throughout a 5 year period. For more information go to www.atwhatpointwillcommonsenseprevail.com For Argument's Sake (A companion film to 'Théâtre de Poche') by Aurélien Froment For Argument's Sake choreographs a series of images beneath the mechanical eye of a video camera. Exploring the process of making the video Théâtre de Poche, For Argument's Sake presents a series of images and gestures referenced in successive interviews with three professionals whose respective activities involve image manipulations: an architect, a retoucher and a jigsaw puzzle maker.The Whisper Choir by Jesse Jones Beginning with a lecture about architecture and historical containers, The Whisper Choir performance relates strongly to Jones' film and installation The Spectre and the Sphere, currently in Project's Gallery, which has been extended until June 21st. The performance revisits the precision of the Theramin's wavering voice, and extends the division between the performers and the performed beyond the barriers of the lit stage.Song of Solomon by Ralph Borland & Julian Jonker Song of Solomon is an aleatoric audio collage - where some compositional elements are left to chance - an 8-channel audio installation that samples many versions of 'Mbube', aka 'Wimoweh' aka 'The Lion Sleeps Tonight', in a sonic tribute to the song's author, the late Solomon Linda. The sound installation both fragments and reorders compositional elements of this 'song of songs', questioning assumptions about compositional innovation and imitation that inform Western intellectual property law. In this jungle of sounds, the dead Author rests.The Black Plum by Kevin Gaffney The narrator of Kevin Gaffney's new performance, derived from his video and slide installation of the same name, leads the audience through a series of readings and dialogue, in a call-and-response format. Introducing the characters who create the architecture of the oblique narrative of The Black Plum , Gaffney's performance is a muted iteration of the highly theatrical and personally reflective artworks, and will feature the recent slide sequence included in his The Black Plum installation."It's time, man. It feels imminent." by Sarah Pierce A short presentation about how people gather and organise, followed by an extended workshop. The audience will be asked to take part in a choreographed sequence of gestures that accompany quotes from bystanders at various political demonstrations. The resulting performance will be filmed as part of a new artwork.For more information please contact This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it . WED 18 JUN 7PM: Garrett Phelan - At what point will common sense prevail Aurélien Froment - For Argument’s Sake (A companion film to ‘Théâtre de Poche’) Jesse Jones - The Whisper Choir THU 19 JUN 7PM: Ralph Borland & Julian Jonker - Song of Solomon Kevin Gaffney - The Black Plum Sarah Pierce - “It’s time, man. It feels imminent.” |