12 Settembre - 7 Novembre 2020
On the Bottom of the Sky | Douglas Henderson
Galerie Mazzoli / Eberswalder Str. 30, Berlino
Sound artista e compositore,
Douglas Henderson (Baltimore, 1960) ha studiato composizione e teoria con Milton Babbitt,
Paul Lansky, e J.K. Randall. Nel 1991 ha consguito il Dottorato in Composizione presso la Princeton University, dopo la laurea in composizione presso il Bard College
nel 1982. Recentemente ha diretto il Dipartimento di Sound Arts presso la School of the
Museum of Fine Arts di Boston, e ha tenuto
.... pagina artista
COMUNICATO STAMPA
“On the bottom of the sky, there stands a man flapping his arms.”
Russell Edson (in an interview with Mark Tursi)
Galerie Mazzoli is proud to present On the Bottom of the Sky, the fourth solo exhibition by Douglas
Henderson its Berlin location.
Henderson is a master sound artist. Few artists can boast comparable knowledge of and loyalty to sonic
phenomena as the Baltimore native. In his work, sound has always been the driving force, the creative
element from which the artistic process unfolds. Fascinated at the beginning of his career by the relation
between sound and the environment, he proceeded to venture more and more into the visual realm by
associating visible artifacts—normally sculptural in nature and often including loudspeakers—to his sonic
concoctions. Seeking to perfect the connection between the auditory and the visual, he began in recent
years to use sound to give life to static matter, setting his pieces in motion in the most unexpected ways
without the aid of motors of any kind. By doing so, he has been able to establish an unbreakable tie between
an object and its sonic counterpart, instantly banishing a semiotic bug that has haunted many sound works
of the last decades: the problem of the cognitive hindrance that separates visual stimuli from the auditory,
when the latter are not connected to the former in an evident source-outcome relation. In Douglas
Henderson's works, sound and the object find sense in each other.
On the Bottom of the Sky follows this trail, showing us a further evolution of his research.
Upon entering the exhibition, we see no visible loudspeakers, and yet immediately become aware of
the formidable presence of sound and silence disguised as motion and stillness. As we proceed to open our
ears, we realize that the assertive soundtracks that have characterized Henderson’s older works have been
replaced with a focus on subsonic elements, namely the ones that have a direct impact on the objects'
motion. Indeed, he addresses the potential of sonic artefacts on the edge of perception.
The work Shimmer, for example, consists of nine pieces of light blue silk cloth suspended from carbon bars
which are assembled in a square grid. They hang from the wall, and through the gaps between them it is
possible to glimpse the supporting structure. When active, the cloth’s homogenous surface melts into
dynamic wave structures, shapes and gestures. On the silk, this results in a vivid graphic game that is
reminiscent of the surface of water. These ephemeral patterns are propelled by low-frequency sinusoidal
tones, which are produced by loudspeakers placed behind the pieces of cloth. The outcome is an exciting
play between geometric stability and transience that is perceived by the eye and ear alike.
At first glance, some of the fleeting graphic patterns appearing on the silk surface of Shimmer seem to have
been frozen in the main structure of Sounder II. A collaboration with the artist‘s brother, sculptor David
Henderson, this piece consists of a two-meter high panel made of black carbon fiber displaying the dynamic
circular movements in a plastic realization. The pulsating circles of the water’s surface now appear solidified
and static. Itself transformed into a large speaker, the work Sounder II translates soundwaves into
mechanical vibrations. The membrane projects audible and inaudible frequencies of the sound
composition, making the object resonate (sometimes visibly) and restituting a soundtrack that is different
from the actual composition driving it, which is in turn based on the frequencies that were used to produce
the visual image. In other words, we have specific sounds in front of our eyes—molded in the sculpture—
which were also used to produce a sound composition to move the image, but we don’t hear most of those
sounds, rather the sculptures’ own interpretation of them.
In another instance (enter.), Henderson confronts a completely static and quiet matter, and sound and
movement are present only in the mind of the viewer, in a form of reminiscence of what the object may
have overheard in the process of becoming what we see before us.
The described pieces represent the main installations in the exhibition. One should not be fooled, however,
into thinking that the auditory aspect of these works is being overlooked. Quite the contrary, sound is
without doubt the life of the party, only in a more subtle way than in Henderson’s previous shows at Galerie
Mazzoli.
In On the Bottom of the Sky, Henderson looks back at his origins, and references pieces that are some 15
years old (e.g., stop, Untitled 2004). In this exhibition he is more concerned with the conceptual and
structural dimensions of sound rather than with its social and political implications. While not completely
doing away with his wit and political satire, as the title suggests, this time Henderson invites us to reflect
upon issues of recontextualization, and perhaps of disorientation—as a form of positive loss of a clear
perspective—through sound. Indeed, he goes one level further in distancing himself from traditional music
composition, and while actuating de facto some similar strategies in the preparation of the soundtracks, he is
not requiring us to listen to a particular fictional narrative. Rather, he wants us to concentrate on the nature
of sound itself, on its relation with its surrounding matter—its visual manifestation—and on its ability to
transform in front of our eyes and fiddle with our perception.
Ultimately, On the Bottom of the Sky reminds us that sound depends on an object in order to exist, but once
it is tied to that object our understanding of it will undergo relentless, infinite shifts.