electronic
Start || Bio || Compositions || Schedule || Collaborations || Words || Contact
C:\dialogue\towards_between.mxo

2016 [for voice, live-electronics, fixed media piece, multi-channel] The piece was staged within the exhibition „The Sovereign Forest“ by Amar Kanwar @ NTU Centre for Contemporary Art in Singapore 2016.
The total duration of the piece is 60 minutes. It is a mixture of a real time 6-channel sound installationsand sections with a live vocal performance. The audience is situated in a space where the border between stage and auditorium is abolished. There is only little illumination. The loudspeakers as well as the performer are not visible. Only certain parts that include a live improvisation with light bulbs and light sensors require the appearance of the performer. The piece is inspired by the book of folk tales called „The Counting Sisters and Other Stories“ written by Amar Kanwar, that tells the stories of a small act of resistance by a group of 7 women who carry out a ritual of remembrance while, around them, state and local politicians and corporations collude to rewrite the legal documents that define the ownership and status of their village.
Considered as a multi-layered dialogue, the piece is a musical translation using the human voice in combination with live electronic sound extensions and spatial sound movements. The performance aimed to stay in a constant dialogue with the exhibition.
Excerpt from „The Counting Sisters and Other Stories“ by Amar Kanwar:
„There are six women who work together and one woman who works in her own. The six call themselves „The Counting Sisters“. (…) The Counting Sisters keep a track of every person killed or disappeared. They keep a track of every name, address, date, and photograph. (…) One day, early in the morning, the police arrested The Counting Sisters.
Is it a crime to mourn the dead?
Is it a Crime to count the disappeared?
The Counting Sisters began to sing.
They first sang about the sorrow of The One Alone (…) and about the daily life of the people of Odisha.
(…) listening and weeping and waiting for The Counting Sisters to be free again.“

