Capturing and processing vibrations

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Revision as of 15:44, 25 January 2023 by BrunoPocheron (talk | contribs)
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Context

Starting Anne Juren's work on sensorial transference, Anne Juren, Paul Kotal and Bruno Pocheron came together in Tanzhalle Wiesenburg in January 2023 for a ten days residency focused on interfacing with vibrations inherent to objects and rooms, addressing the relation between inside and outside spaces . Marc Lagies and Marcello Silvio Busato contributed to that research.


Initial concepts

In sensorial Transference we used the term of trans-corporealities (which refers to the ways bodies are interconnected and travers by each other in a co-regulated way) that can happen during the treatment. For example heart beats start synchronising during a session between a patient and a practitioner and the body-systems start moving together.

We were interested in exploring how those interconnections can also apply to spaces and objects, how these are affected by their environment (the outside) and how the materials they are made of resonate (the inside). For that we focused on the notion of vibration within and beyond the audible and visible ranges, and tried out electromechanical ways of creating an artificial trans-corporeality between objects and spaces.

A similar approach can be found e.g. in the works of Bill Fontana. https://ars.electronica.art/planetb/de/silent-echoes-notre-dame/


Set up / Implementation

We concentrated on metallic objects such as a gong, fire bowls, singing bowls for their properties of capturing, filtering and transposing/transporting vibrations in the audible domain. We also treated the whole space of Tanzhalle Wiesenburg as a resonating body. For now we used piezo sensors and microphones to capture the vibrations, transducers and speakers to amplify and displace them, incandescent lighting bulbs and LED fixtures to translate them in the visible spectrum.

In our experimental set up we used mainly two objects as inputs:

   a gong placed on the roof of the studio equipped with a piezo sensor, capturing the sonic environment (trains from afar, birds, sirens, conversations of neighbours, kids playing, church bells, a wedding cortege, etc.)
   a singing bowl placed in the room equipped with a dynamic microphone and played as an instrument.


Sound treatment applied to the input from the gong:

   eQing in order to clean the signal of parasite noise and to compensate for overly present resonances. 
   heavy compression to enhance the atmospheric sounds and avoid clipping
   transient shaping to extend the natural sustain of the gong
   noise reduction

Creation of a sequence