In
Bird's Nest Wakefield
A collaboration with sound artist Shawn Decker
Public
Arts, Wakefield, UK, 2004, 1st of September -

The Bird’s
Nest Wakefield is basically the same version as in the ISEA exhibition
in Kiasma, but made to function outdoors. The Bird’s Nest Wakefield explores
new ways of developing architecture based on forms found in nature. These
forms are combined with kinetic sound works that are likewise derived
directly from natural processes. The artists see these acoustic and kinetic
elements functioning as architectural ornamentation, broadening of the
concept of the “ornament” to include sound and rhythm.
Although the Bird’s Nest looks chaotic, it is made of a single, geometric,
triangular shaped wooden ”module". The concept of the module has been
widely used in modernist architecture, resulting in monotonous buildings
with repeated patterns. In the Bird’s Nest structure, however, the arrangement
of the triangular "modules" in a semi-chaotic manner creates a space which
is more organic and rooted in structures found within natural systems.
Visitors are invited to sit down inside the Nest and experience the sound
and the transparency of the structure and how it allows the surrounding
to be a part of the experience. In the Nest made for Wakefield exhibition
small motors equipped with a small leather strap hit piano wires, which
form a transparent roof over the Nest, and which connect it to the environment
surrounding it. The sounds are constantly changing and never repeat, being
generated by a computer program modelling patterns and processes directly
derived from nature. This constant change directly contrasts with the
overwhelming presence of recorded media in our contemporary culture, which
has desensitized us to the subtle and complex processes and the constant
change found in nature.
pictures
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