Luke Fowler, A Grammar for Listening Part 3, 2009, 16mm Film, In cooperation with Toshiya Tsunoda, Courtesy the artist and The Modern Institute, Glasgow

Luke Fowler & Toshiya Tsunoda, Ridges on The Horizontal Plane, 2011, Mixed Media Installation, Courtesy Galerie Gisela Capitain, Köln
Luke Fowler & Toshiya Tsunoda, Ridges on The Horizontal Plane, 2011, Mixed Media Installation, Courtesy Galerie Gisela Capitain, Köln
Luke Fowler & Toshiya Tsunoda, Ridges on The Horizontal Plane, 2011, Mixed Media Installation, Courtesy Galerie Gisela Capitain, Köln
Toshiya Tsunoda, Maguchi Bay, 2011, Courtesy der Künstler
Toshiya Tsunoda, The Temple Recording, 2011, Farbfotografie, Courtesy der Künstler

Luke Fowler & Toshiya Tsunoda

imprint/field/surface


NOVEMBER 19, 2011 – JANUARY 29, 2012

OPENING: FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 7 PM

The exhibition entitled »imprint/field/surface« shows film and sound installations, photographs and photo collages by the artists, Luke Fowler (*1978, lives and works in Glasgow) und Toshiya Tsunoda (*1964, lives and works in Yokohama). Their works function at the threshold between sound and image. An installation spread over four spaces at Bielefelder Kunstverein forms the exhibition’s centre, consisting of four works, both recent and newly produced. One of the central questions arises as to how a significant dialogue between seeing and hearing can come about today. Fowler’s and Tsunoda’s collaboration is not just characterised by the technical combination of 16mm film and acoustic systems of reproduction. Much rather, what unites them is a shared interest in displaying simple objects, states and phenomena, which can be observed under shifting conditions.

Luke Fowler works predominantly with the medium of film. His film installations mark a departure from the traditional approaches of documentary films and the ways such films can be presented. Partially forgotten concepts and experiments, be they from Scottish psychiatrist, R.D. Laing (1927–1989) or avantgarde composer and later political activist, Cornelius Cardew (1936–1981), stand at the centre of Fowler’s film portraits. These are not conventional portraits, as we know them from journalism or documentary filmmaking. All of his portrait-films consisted of found-footage, his own shots, archive material, and new interpretations of texts. This process shifted the subject of the portrait increasingly into the background, so that the film itself became an organ of speech through its composition in editing and soundtrack. Fowler has been shooting on 16 mm for six years and in his latest works he takes up film’s materiality and its /historical conditions in relation to sound and image. His works reveal both a particular interest in structuralist film and in the directness of the filmic presentation techniques in the Expanded Cinema projects of the 1960’s. His artistic work is further characterised by intensive collaboration with other film and sound artists – as in this exhibition project with Toshiya Tsunoda.

Colleagues like to describe Toshiya Tsunoda, who originally studied painting in Tokyo, as a »Field Recording Sensei«. A new understanding of »Field Recording« characterises his approach. As a rule, this genre of contemporary music concerns itself with recording ambient sounds outdoors. However, instead of restricting himself to naturalistic recordings, Tsunoda has developed his pieces into unique compositions dealing with the relationship of humans to nature and of space to experience. Many of his earlier works concentrate on individual phenomena, like oscillations in solid materials or vibrations arising from the air. They become audible and reveal their hidden beauty in every sonic and structural detail. Tsunoda gathers never-before heard sounds from things and landscapes with the fastidious approach of a scientist. Yet his work is concerned with philosophical, rather than scientific questions about the constitution of places how we experience them.

Since 2008, Luke Fowler and Toshiya Tsunoda have been working together regularly in the context of exhibitions, film projects or publishing music. Together, they have so far created the »Composition For Flutter Screen«, a film installation produced for the Yokohama Triennial (2008) and shown in the Serpentine Gallery in 2009; the film, »A Grammar For Listening Part 3« (2009), the album, »Familial Recordings« (Edition.t, 2010) or »Helen« (part of the series: Tenement Films, produced and broadcast on British Channel 4).

Curator: Thomas Thiel

 

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