Tokyo 12/2006, Part 2: Viola’s Dreams

High atop the Roppongi Hills Mori Tower in Tokyo sits the Mori Art Museum, a contemporary venue with a global vision. It floats 53 stories above the city, but before you even get to see the art your eyes have a feast in store for them. And it’s the sort of visual display that might give any artist second thoughts about exhibiting at the Mori in the first place.

On the tower’s 52nd floor, an observation deck called the Tokyo City View provides a 360-degree panorama. Way on the horizon, if you look toward the Shibuya district, sits Mount Fuji, but between you and those distant mountains are the dense environs some 12 million residents call home. The view is staggering, the sheer information overload of all that teaming life and business, bustle and architecture, heading off in every direction. The museum and the deck are intended to complement each other; one ticket provides access to both. But what in the world sort of art could compete with the man-made marvel that is Tokyo?

Well, from October 14, 2006, through January 8 of this year, the artist to take that challenge was video and sound-art trailblazer Bill Viola, and I had the opportunity to take in the massive exhibit, titled Hatsu-Yume (First Dream), on the final night of my December 2006 trip to Tokyo. Some 16 Viola works, several taking up entire rooms, filled the expansive space. The exhibit took its name from the Japanese tradition of reflecting on the first dream of the new year as a harbinger of what’s to come. Dim lighting and a respectful museum hush, despite the packed Sunday night crowd, helped fulfill Hasu-Yume‘s dream mission.

Among the pieces were slow-motion investigations of human emotions, including “The Greeting”(1995), in which three women interact on a street, their relation to one another traced in the lines of their faces, expressions evoking elation, jealousy, suspicion and sadness. In “The Raft”(2004), a mixed-race group of citizens is pummeled by water, the motion slowed to focus on the physicality of the experience, a high-tech rendition of Muybridge’s famous photographic studies. Some pieces were relatively compact, like “Dolorossa”(2000), in which framed photos turn out to be moving images of a man and a woman one synapse shy of weeping, and “Heaven and Earth”(1992), in which a pair of facing television sets, one dangling above the other, show an elderly woman seemingly on the verge of death and a newborn taking some of its first breaths. Some were massive: “The Crossing”(1996), simply because the artist opted for a dual-sided projection some 20 feet tall and 10 wide, one side showing a man emerging from fire, the other from water; “The Veiling”(1995), because it played out over nine semi-transparent scrims that ushered the viewer into a dense forest.

The visuals held their own against the recent, cornea-searing memory of the Tokyo cityscape by harnessing technological ingenuity and emotional content. And Viola had one additional tool in the unspoken competition between life and art: sound. The view of the city is dreamlike in its own way, to witness such intense density of life but to hear nothing of it. Viola’s exhibit, on the other hand, came with a warning, in Japanese and English: “Some works emit loud, sudden sounds. Please proceed with caution.”

About a third of the pieces combined video and audio. “The Crossing”found homonym-like quality between the sounds of fire and water. An installation titled “The Stopping Mind” (1991) is based on the writings of the 17th-century Zen philosopher Takuan Soho. It consists of four screens suspended from the ceiling, each projecting rapid spews of imagery and accompanying noise before suddenly stopping, for an instant. The effect is a sort of aesthetic whiplash, and the piece stood in stark contrast with the entire rest of Hatsu-Yume, which while still kinetic, emphasized patience. (The work, like the title of the overall show, notes the influence on Viola by Buddhist thought and by Japan, where he lived for over a year in the early 1980s. A video “Message from Bill Viola” was posted on the Mori website, mori.art.museum.)

The show was impressive on its own, but I couldn’t help but contrast it with a Viola show I’d visited earlier in the year at the Oakland Museum of California. While the Mori gave over the entirety of that sprawling top floor to Viola, in Oakland he had a small room in which videos (all with sound) played on a loop: a collection of late 1970s work called “The Reflecting Pool,” plus “Anthem,” “The Passing” and “Déserts,” this last one to music by Edgard Varèse in a performance by Ensemble Modern.

“The Reflecting Pool” was fascinating, in retrospect, since so many of Viola’s tropes are contained in that one piece: symmetry, the single human figure, slow motion, the line where one element (in this case air) meets another (the water of the title pool), and the sound of field recordings. Among the films in “The Reflecting Pool” set was “Vegetable Memory,” shot at the famed Tokyo fish market, Tsukiji. Combined, this was almost three hours worth of video, but those three hours seemed much more formidable than the expansive space in the Mori, where one could wander freely between pieces, rather than feel required to sit dutifully.

More on the Mori at mori.art.museum/eng and on Viola at billviola.com. (This entry is, belatedly, part two; for part one, click here.)

Dark Matters at the Yerba Buena

The subtitle to Dark Matters, the new exhibit at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco, is “Artists See the Impossible.” Many of the featured artists employ sound in an attempt to achieve this end. But perhaps the real lesson of Dark Matters is that it isn’t a matter of what’s possible and what’s impossible — it’s a matter of doing away with the primacy of the visual in museums, in favor of allowing other senses to serve the artist’s metaphoric vision.

The highlight of Dark Matters is “Listening Post” (2000 – 2006), credited to statistician Mark Hansen and artist Ben Rubin but also involving the unwitting participation of thousands of largely anonymous individuals. Hansen and Rubin have constructed a mesmerizing grid of suspended LEDs, 11 by 21, along with speakers that emit related sounds. The LEDs flash precisely choreographed yet ever-changing streams of words and phrases, all drawn from searches for data on the Internet. The work rotates through several movements, each of which parses the data in a different manner. One movement is constructed from four-letter words (“omit,” “food,” “zits” and, inevitably, far less savory ones), another from phrases that begin “I am” or “I’m” (“I’m on the crack patch myself,” “I’m cheering for Japan,” “I’m having an identity crisis today…”). At times a synthesized voice reads selections from the text; at others bell-like musical tones fill the room. When an LED changes text, it makes a light click, and the careful pacing of those clicks evidences the attention to detail that Hansen and Rubin bring to their work.

I’d seen “Listening Post” previously, having on three occasions driven down from San Francisco to check it out at the San Jose Museum of Art, where it is part of the permanent collection. The first time I sat through it, a half hour or so in all, I emerged with two thoughts: first, that I was suffering severe data poisoning; second, that I couldn’t wait to visit again. In San Jose, the piece benefited from a description of how each of its movements was conceptualized; for some reason that text is omitted in the Yerba Buena staging. The entry text to Yerba Buena states, “Hansen and Rubin translate this invisible data into a complex, symphonic environment of palpable, auditory and visual experience as if conjuring something out of thin air.” All of which is true, but perhaps their accomplishment would seem less mysterious, less a matter of “conjuring,” had that explanatory text been presented here.

Elsewhere on the Yerba Buena’s first floor, Sergio Prego‘s “Black Monday” makes use of the multi-camera technology that allowed characters in the Matrix films to be viewed with eerie three-dimensional fluidity. Prego applies the technique not to leather-clad information-warriors, but to a rigged explosion in an enclosed warehouse space. The resulting cloud balloons in a series of cross-cuts that are matched by a soundtrack of stuttered, split-second bits of noise and voices. Walid Raad‘s “We Can Make Rain but No One Cares to Ask” is a double-widescreen projection of images related to confrontations in the Middle East: documents, schematics and exploded buildings set to an audio collage of field recordings. I sometimes wonder if the popularity of exaggerated, almost panoramic widescreen images in video installations is an attempt to complement or to try, merely, to keep up with the immersive properties of sound. (More on Raad at theatlasgroup.org.)

Kambui Olujimi‘s “Scaredy Cats” consists of recordings of conversations in various languages on three banks of phones — plain, black, Emerson sets — dispersed throughout the show. Judging at least by the English-language portions (“Tell me that Marshall is just a big fat liar”; “Things happen, my ass”), the voice acting isn’t particularly believable, and thus diminishes the intended voyeuristic kick.

Charles Norman Mason teamed with two visual artists for “Murmurs: Three Compositions for Porous Architecture.” He created sonic accompaniment to Richard Barnes‘ photos of birds flocking above Rome, a mix of chatter and sonar-like noise, emphasizing how much the swarms look like bats in the images. (The Barnes photos resemble the cover to the band Wilco’s album Sky Blue Sky, also shot in Rome, by Manuel Presti, who won the BBC Wildlife Photographer of the Year in 2005.) Alex Schweder‘s “Folded Murmur” consists of a four-screen box on which are projected (inside and out) moving images of those same birds. You step up on a pedestal so that your head is in the box, and every once in a while the pedestal rocks with a nearly subsonic tremor as the sound ebbs and flows. (Barnes’ photos are viewable at the website of the Hosfelt Gallery, hosfeltgallery.com, and Schweder’s piece is documented at alexschweder.com.)

Out in the museum’s courtyard, a small concrete space that has a lovely pool and some graceful bamboo but could use a few benches, Mason has combined the sounds from the Barnes and the Schweder pieces with other recordings; the result is a florid soundtrack in a fairly antiseptic landscape. Of course, even before you step into the courtyard, the sounds of the Barnes and Schweder pieces merge into something entirely unintended; no matter where you stand in Dark Matters, you’re certain to hear the “Listening Post” piece, and depending on proximity, the Prego, Raad and Olujimi also join the gallery’s soundscape. Porousness is an issue with which all curators of sound art struggle.

Not everything in Dark Matters  includes sonic elements. David Maisel shows photos of neglected, rusty containers that hold the remains of mental patients (in a review of the exhibit today, at sfgate.com, the San Francisco Chronicle’s art critic, Kenneth Baker, noted that Maisel’s photos “stand out here because their silence contrasts so meaningfully with the verbal and vocal liveliness of ‘Listening Post'”).

Bull.Miletic‘s “Heaven Can Wait” (2001-ongoing) is a grid of flat screens, five high and three wide, each showing video from rotating restaurants around the world. It resembles Marco Brambilla’s “Cyclorama” (1999), a nine-screen installation that is in the permanent collection of the SFMOMA, across the street from the Yerba Buena. The two key differences between “Heaven Can Wait” and “Cyclorama” are that the latter is set up in a circle and has sound. Bull.Miletic is the duo Synne Bull and Dragan Miletic (bull.miletic.info).

Trevor Paglen, who concerns himself with what is off limits by law, presents photos that show distant glimpses of military bases around the world. He also reproduces images from the passports of CIA agents currently embroiled in the case of a kidnapping in Italy, two of whom have names oddly similar to the captain of the Starship Enterprise. One wall at the museum features a list of hundreds upon hundreds of code names for recent military activities, “ambient breeze” among them. (Paglen has well-documented his work at his paglen.com site, and I wrote about his to piece “Listening to Pelican Bay” [disquiet.com] when it was presented at the 2004 San Francisco Electronic Music Festival.)

Surveillance is also central to the “proximity” installation by Alison Sant and Richard Johnson, who project images caught by a hidden camera that one of them wore in a hand-made felt vest. (Some of the footage is viewable at Sant’s site, alisant.net.) The vest is also on display — and in a cute twist, one of the video screens is projected back out to the street. However, a further irony cancels out that witty bit of staging: Despite this being an exhibit largely about the power and danger of secrecy, no photography is allowed at the Yerba Buena.

The exhibit is up from July 28 through November 1. More info at ybca.org.

Surreal Madrid MP3s

Netlabel works are, by nature, untethered. They’re generally the effort of relatively unknown musicians, composing and performing from behind opaque pseudonyms that obscure their identities, and the releases rarely have a physical manifestation, like a CD, or anything else to root them in the broader world. At its essence, a netlabel release is just a free-floating link in the vast ocean of the Internet.

And various-artist collections on netlabels take that rootlessness a step further. A case in point is Hände Hoch! Vol. 2 on the Surreal Madrid label (surrealmadrid.net). It comes with five tracks and no apparent central conceit — except that the title means “hands up” in German, and that in a proper club at a proper hour one or two of these tracks might just make you want to throw your hands in the air, as the song goes.

Of the five, there are three keepers, not bad odds for a free album. Andres y Ralf‘s “Casi sin alzar los Ojos” is distinguished not so much by the liminal underscoring of what seem to be modified field recordings, but by the way occasional modulations at various intervals give the impression of something in the process of waking up, of coming to life (MP3). Mochipet‘s “Kickass Pencilbox,” heard here in a remix by Karaoke Tundra, is that rare treat: an electronica single forged mostly from verbal cues — old-school hip-hop tics and lovely choral fragments from some forgotten ’60s TV theme song; at just under two minutes, it ends way too soon (MP3). And with its scraped-metal textures leaning heavily on drone synths, Mina Halm‘s “Watching Individual Social Perception” is the most likely piece here to be picked up by an aspiring filmmaker to add tension to a scene (MP3).

More info on Andres y Ralf at myspace.com/zortmusic, on Mochipet at myspace.com/mochipet, on Tundra at myspace.com/karaoketundra and on Halm at myspace.com/minahalm.

Conveyor Belt Pop Machine

Name: The Pâte à Son ”¢ Rating: Hella Cool ”¢ Format: Online Software ”¢ Play

The Pâte à Son was devised in 2004 as “a sound toy and compositional tool conceived to encourage musical experimentation.” Built in Shockwave, it appears as a chessboard of variously configured pipes, below which a production line continuously pumps out new types of pipes. Each pipe can be popped on the board and rotated. Some allow items to pass straight through, others redirect the items, others still introduce means to bounce those items in various ways, and every pipe produces sound in a new way. Switches, levers and permutations allow for alterations of tone, tune and tempo. It was conceived and produced by Frédéric Durieu’s LeCielEstBleu (lecielestbleu.com) in association with the Cité de la Musique (more info at cite-musique.fr/pateason). A new version of Pâte à Son, titled FluxTunes, is reportedy in the works.

Lo-Fi Xylophone

Name: Small Sound Toy Ӣ Rating: Kinda Cool Ӣ Format: Online Software Ӣ Play

Designed by Brian Judy and housed amid other interactive experiments at Judy’s boogaholler.com site, Small Sound Toy is a mouse-activated digital xylophone of sorts. Vertical stripes and associated beeps occur in a browser window, depending on where you slide your mouse. As a sound fades over time, it dissolves from full bleep to threadbare blip, and the line gets thinner and less colorful. The leaf pattern in the rotating background image suggests an appropriate use for the toy.