"Butter Churn" sound sculpture launch
"Butter Churn" sound sculpture launch
Black’s "Butter Churn" sound sculpture installation was launched in Lismore's Heritage Park on Friday 27th July 2007 .
The "Butter Churn" sound sculpture installation aims to sonically animate and resonate the Norco "Butter Churn" sculpture which is located in Lismore's Heritage Park.
The work explores the idea that the "Butter Churn" is a metaphor for the evolution of the local colonised rural culture of Lismore. Just like the fluidity of the cream it churned into butter, this churn helped to changed the uncertain liquidity of the Lismore economy into a stable community.
As all enclosures inherently have predominantly resonating frequencies, Colin Black with assisting artist Yanna Black explore the Butter Churn's latent sonorities with the creation of the sound installation’s "I Am Sitting In The Lismore Butter Churn" movement. Combining Alvin Lucier like recordings techniques with spatialised electroacoustic composition that payes homage to early electronic music, the work rings out the object's dimensions within its landscape and sonically impacts on the culture that it has helped to shape in the past. The idea is to give this object a voice after years of silence and inactivity, opening up the dialogue between the the past and the present while investigating how this object continues to influence the evolution of the local culture of Lismore.
Visitors to the site will be able to activate the "Butter Churn" spatial sound sculpture installation between the hours of 9am to 9pm.
For more info see Northern Rivers Echo & Lismore Council News
Special thanks to Lismore City Council
Thursday, 26 July 2007
News