• Interview with Andr�s Ram�rez Gaviria – Esme Watanabe

    Date posted: May 1, 2006 Author: jolanta

    Interview with Andr�s Ram�rez Gaviria

    Esme Watanabe

    Watanabe:
    Andrés, what are the sources of the sounds? They seemed abstract and without
    reference but gave me the feeling of travelling through a haunted house. I felt
    like spirits and ghosts were echoing my steps,, it was a little creepy, but engaging.

    Gaviria:
    Some of the sounds are a mix of samples that were taken from various Akai format
    CDs like Distorted Reality,; others were directly recorded in the 450 Broadway
    staircase /in sitú/ in situ, but also mixed through different effects
    in order to have all the sounds play within common parameters. In their layering
    or juxtaposing, I intended to have them distorted enough so as to heighten and
    alter the participant’s experience but still suggest /retain/ an indirect/vague/
    reference to the participant’s immediate environment.

    Watanabe:
    Did you get a sense of how other people reacted to the work? What kind of effect
    do changes in volume, speed, or tone have on the participant’s experience?

    Gaviria:
    The different levels of interaction made the outcome of the participant’s
    experience unforeseeable and therefore, more interesting. The changes in volume,
    speed, or tone I think made the participants aware that their movements where
    not only triggering, but altering, the different sounds, which placed them in
    a mutual, though at times unpleasant, relationship with their surroundings.

    Watanabe:
    IsWas it important that Of Conflicts and Denials wasbe placed in the staircase?
    How is itit different from a hallway or a room? Steps often function in dream
    imagery as a symbol of a journey or transcendence, — does that have anything
    to do with your installation?

    Gaviria:
    Yes, it iswas important that for the piece was to be installed in the staircase.
    I wanted to create a situation where the inter-relationship between the participant
    and the environment would played a specific role in the participant’s experience.
    Steps often function in dream imagery, as you say, as a symbol of a journey or
    transcendence, and that connotation appealed to me. In the cCatholic religion,
    transcendence is often believed to be an ascending journey. In some of my last
    installations/latest work I have been attempting to invert the illusory leap
    of religious transcendence into a cunning system that regurgitates the same disappointing
    results. In The Marginal Void, for example, I had a laser drawing the form of
    a cross on top of a bed. The cross drew more or less vigorously, depending on
    the amount of movement and/or sound made within the exhibition space. Since the
    cross served as the only source of light, the participants used it as a seemingly
    stable point to navigate the darkness. Paradoxically, any movement by the participants
    deformed the cross, stripping it of its recognized meaning. Similarly, in this
    installation, having the participants at the top trigger sounds that were emitted
    at the bottom of the staircase and vice versa, I had hoped to create a kind of
    looping effect that diminished the linear idea implied by walking frorm one point
    to another, the feeling of reaching the end of a journey. The four cameras and
    monitors installed inon each of the landings were also intended to give the participant
    a similar sense of displacement.

    Watanabe:
    What about using thethat specific particular staircase at 450 Broadway? It is
    creaky, old, rickety, and is littered with holes; did it function as a kind of
    found object?

    Gaviria:
    The fact that it is creaky, old and littered with holes appealed to a personal
    sensibility that seems to inform the a lot of the formal and conceptual decisions
    I make about my work.

    Watanabe:
    I noticed that the sound was emitted through very impressive looking “BOSE”
    speakers lashed to the ceiling,. hHow does this specific type of technology function
    in the piece? Is it significant that the sound is coming from above the participant?

    Gaviria:
    Well, the speakers are unidirectional, which helped set apart, through sound,
    different sections of the staircase. They still have, however, an angle of about
    80 degrees which made it possible to create some panning effects that ran a sample
    from one speaker to another, making the sound travel distinctly and accurately
    through space. Hanging the speakers and sub-base from the ceiling was more of
    a technical solution. Because of the acoustics in the staircase, the speakers
    and especially the sub-base needed to have some space in front and around them
    so as not to have the sound waves reverberate off the walls and affect the quality
    of the sound. It was also safer and more secure, even though theits installation
    was complicated and time consuming, to have the equipment out off hands’
    reach during the exhibition.

    Watanabe:
    What are the sources of inspiration or ideas behind Of Conflicts and Denials?
    What is communicated to the viewer? What does the title of the piece mean?

    Gaviria:
    Of cConflicts and Denials developed from The Marginal Void, the installation
    I had previously exhibited.

    It further accentuates the conflict ofbetween the individual with and his or
    her immediate environment, while pointing to an inability to accept or deal with
    that conflict. The work, however, as I have previously expressed, is not a mere
    statement of information or persuasion but a direct link with a specific state
    of being. Even though the work addresses themes of religion/spirituality, technology,
    and the self, I hope the content of the work does not become immediately apparent,
    but that it unravels through the experience of the participant. The most interesting
    pieces of art, I believe, are successful not for what they show but for what
    they conceal.

    Watanabe:
    I read an interesting article in tThe New York Times Magazine by Marshall Sella
    about Hyper Sonic Sound. HSS “directs the sound as a laser beam directs
    light,.” tThe sound shot at someone seems like it is coming from within
    the individual’s head and not from the outside environment. HSS is already
    being used by the military as a weapon, — it will probably revolutionize
    advertising and the experience of hearing music, — but do you think HSS
    has any implications for art?

    Gaviria:
    I am sure it will have implications infor the way some artists use sound.

    New technological developments can offer new representational possibilities and
    experiences. They can create, as ithas already been shown with existing technologies,
    alterations in the personal and social experience of time, space and place. They
    can often offer a variety of possibilities that generate a shift in our perception
    of reality.

    For an artist, however, the medium is only the starting point. Ultimately, the
    work has to be rooted or comprehensible in other aspects other than the technological
    development / novelty of its constituent parts.

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