Playing the Building, by D. Byrne
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With Playing the Building, David Byrne wanted to create an installation that would produce sound and would take advantage of the fact it is housed in a raw factory space- with exposed pipes, heating and structural elements.
Devices are attached to the building structure- to the metal beams, the plumbing, the electrical conduits, the heating pipes, the water pipes - and are used to make these things produce sound. No amplification is used, no computer synthesis of sound and there are no speakers. The machines will produce sound through wind, vibration and striking. The devices that are part of the piece do not produce sound on their own, but instead they cause the building elements themselves to vibrate, resonate and oscillate so that the building itself becomes a very large musical instrument. At the the Färgfabriken artspace, Stockholm, Sweden. 2005-10-08 - 2005-11-13. Thanks Matti. Related: Sascha blogged the Electromechanical mandala workshop with Douglas Irving Repetto at the UDK in Berln. |
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Regine, at "we-make-money-not-art.com":http://www.we-make-money-not-art.com/ blogs about David Byrne's hacking a building into a musical instrument. The art of hacking is an interesting lens with which to view architecture. It's always a positive thi... Read More
Regine, at "we-make-money-not-art.com":http://www.we-make-money-not-art.com/ blogs about David Byrne's hacking a building into a musical instrument. The art of hacking is an interesting lens with which to view architecture. It's always a positive thi... Read More
Architecture as Instrument With Playing the Building, David Byrne wanted to create an installation that would produce sound and would take advantage of the fact it is housed in a raw factory space- with exposed pipes, heating and structural elements.... Read More

