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From the Island
Friday, 11 April 2014
Friday, 13 September 2013
Two artists reflect on what Voyager's departure really means
TWO ARTISTS, WHO HAVE BEEN WORKING ON THE VOYAGER SPACE CRAFT AND ITS GOLDEN RECORD, REFLECT ON THEIR WORK AS VOYAGER IS OFFICIALLY ACKNOWLEDGED TO HAVE LEFT THE SOLAR SYSTEM.
The press release is available here.
The press release is available here.
Andrews and Verdugo have been engaged in
work on the Voyager space probe since 2010. Kevin Andrews an Artist and
Economist from London, UK says:
“As would be expected when the official
announcement is made there is a lot of publicity about the craft at its amazing
achievements, but it will take some time for the cultural significance of the
Voyager to filter through.”
Two key cultural aspects are firstly what
Voyager means in terms of a commemorative memory of life on Earth and secondly
the perspective it gives on migration and border crossing on Earth. These are the two themes addressed in the
Migration and Memory project: From the Island.
As Andrews says: “Voyager’s Golden Record is a very imperfect memory of life on
Earth. Given Voyager will outlive us and
the solar system because of the preservative nature of deep space, the memory
on the Golden Record is set to last a very long time indeed: billions of
years. Its architect, the visionary Carl
Sagan in putting together the Golden Record as a remembrance also undertook an
act of forgetting – everything not on the Record itself. That’s what interests
me.”
The contents of the Golden Record include
music and images. Given the time
available to Carl Sagan and his team, however, this collection is highly
idiosyncratic and personal: including as it does a record of the brain waves of
Ann Druyan – later to become Sagan’s wife – as she thought about the object of
her love – Sagan himself.
According to Andrews: “What’s as significant to me as the Golden Record itself is what it
says about the species that created it. I think it’s a very poor record of life
on Earth. It is not an objective
portrait. There is for example no
reference to war on the record; neither does popular 20th century
culture get a mention (aside from a Chuck Berry record).”
Andrews continues: “I think this means the Golden Record is ripe for a re-imagining by
artists, musicians, photographers and if that is a consequence of the publicity
regarding the departure of Voyager then that would be fantastic.”
The second theme is that of migration.
Enrique Verdugo a Chilean Photographer and
film maker working in London notes: “Voyager
represents the ultimate in border crossing for humans. As a migrant myself I was very interested in
this aspect. We travelled to the Canary
Islands to take a picture of the region of Space where Voyager is from the
Nordic Optical Telescope in 2012, as Voyager was leaving the solar system.”
The Canary Islands represent a very
significant location in the landscape of migration – being the point of first
arrival for many migrants from Africa who make an arduous sea journey to the
Islands before trying to get into mainland Europe.
As Verdugo notes: “The juxtaposition of these ideas about migration are very interesting. I hope it helps us reflect on the fact that
while we celebrate the movement of Voyager beyond the solar system, we are much
more ambiguous about the movement of people – particularly those from low
income countries.”
Verdugo continues: “Money moves around the globe, goods move around the globe, even ideas
move around and if you are someone from a middle or high income country you
move around too. But if you are born in
a low income country, almost regardless of your ability to contribute to life
on Earth, you have less ability to move around than a can of coca-cola”.
NOTES TO EDITORS:
Kevin Andrews (46, UK/CANADA) and Enrique
Verdugo (44, CHILE/UK) began to collaborate in 2010 when they realised that the
projects they were working on (Voyager and migration) were actually very interrelated. Since starting to collaborate they have
produced a number of outputs including films, photographs and installations:
Between Islands – a film made following the visit to the Nordic Optical Telescope
reflecting on the location and its significance for the themes of migration and
memory. Between Islands was recently shown at Kinston University as part of an
installation at the degree show.
Black is the colour of memory – a film of an
impromptu performance at an installation at the Ars Electronica festival reflecting on the Voyager’s intergalactic greetings.
HM’s Dream – a film made in response
to the theme of this year’s Ars Electronica festival: Total Recall: The Evolution of Memory. This film combines the Golden Record and
ideas about memory from the patient Henry Molaison – the most famous patient in
Neuroscience who led to the development of new theories about memory formation.
Migration and Memory Diptych – a photograph taken
of voyager in October 2012 as it crossed in to inter-stellar space merged with
a picture taken by the Suomi NPP satellite of North Africa showing the routes
of migration at night.
Memory and Migration Triptych – a composite
photograph which inserts an image from a man and an observatory between the
Voyager and migration route pictures.
Tuesday, 10 September 2013
Black is the Colour of Memory (Video made at Ars Electronica 2013)
This video was made at Ars Electronica in Linz in September 2013. It uses footage from an intervention by Hydraprojects on an existing installation Souvenir by Artists from Italy and Austria*.
The video is also available on YouTube
This was an unscripted and impromptu intervention: contributing to the realistic look of surprise from the cosmonauts in the bubble.
The video uses audio from the Golden Record which is attached to the Voyager Space probe: namely the Messages from the UN Delegates. This includes parts of poems by Baudelaire and Harry Martinson as well as greetings in Arabic, Indonesian, French, Punjabi, German, English, Efik (Nigerian), Spanish, Flemish, Persian, Esperanto and Swedish. It ends with the words:
We saw a nebula in a telescope
A golden mistcluster we thought we saw....
The video is in response to the discussion at the Ars Electronica Symposium on Total Recall: the Evolution of Memory: since Voyager, and its Golden Record, is at this moment the only long term memory of the human race which will outlive the the planet and the solar system.
* Souvenier was produced by:
Alias Rosalie (AT/IT)
Giovanni Jussi (IT)
Mario Stadler (AT)
Maria Spanring (AT)
The video is also available on YouTube
This was an unscripted and impromptu intervention: contributing to the realistic look of surprise from the cosmonauts in the bubble.
The video uses audio from the Golden Record which is attached to the Voyager Space probe: namely the Messages from the UN Delegates. This includes parts of poems by Baudelaire and Harry Martinson as well as greetings in Arabic, Indonesian, French, Punjabi, German, English, Efik (Nigerian), Spanish, Flemish, Persian, Esperanto and Swedish. It ends with the words:
We saw a nebula in a telescope
A golden mistcluster we thought we saw....
The video is in response to the discussion at the Ars Electronica Symposium on Total Recall: the Evolution of Memory: since Voyager, and its Golden Record, is at this moment the only long term memory of the human race which will outlive the the planet and the solar system.
* Souvenier was produced by:
Alias Rosalie (AT/IT)
Giovanni Jussi (IT)
Mario Stadler (AT)
Maria Spanring (AT)
Wednesday, 4 September 2013
HM's Dream (prepared in response to the Ars Electronica Festival: Total Recall)
HM's Dream (2013), 4 minutes and 37 seconds.
If the video doesnt want to play you can find on youtube here.
HM's Dream is a short video prepared in response to the Ars Electronica Festival in Linz, Austia (5-9 September, 2013). The festival, Total Recall, is about memory. Hence the piece plays on the idea of Henry Molaison's (HM's) dream which he refers to in the quote:
"Right now I'm wondering if I have said or done anything amiss. You see, at this moment, everything looks clear to me, but what happened just before, that's what worries me. It's like waking from a dream I just don't remember"
You see Henry Molaison, the most famous patient in neuroscience (Patient HM) could not form long term memories. The Golden Record aboard the Voyager space probe, is (at this moment) the only record of the existence of mankind that will outlive mankind and the solar system. Everything else is just Henry's dream. Something to be experienced but not set to last.
The video uses stills from the Golden Record along with twelve composite images prepared for the project. These are combined with images of Henry's Brain and of memory neurons. The underlying image is of the star field (in constellation Ophiuchus) where Voyager is at present. This picture was taken with the help of the Nordic Optical Telescope in October 2012. A last picture of Voyager on the day the BBC reported it had left the solar system. A huge debt to Supersimmetria's documentary (Voyager). The project uses processed video and audio from that project which itself uses footage from the Voyager project. Other audio is taken from NASA Voyager Space Sounds releases (Symphonies of the Planets - Jupiter). These are mixed in Resolume Arena. Live improvised performances of the piece use the Korg Monotribe Analogue Ribbon Station (v2) to trigger and overlay sounds.
If the video doesnt want to play you can find on youtube here.
HM's Dream is a short video prepared in response to the Ars Electronica Festival in Linz, Austia (5-9 September, 2013). The festival, Total Recall, is about memory. Hence the piece plays on the idea of Henry Molaison's (HM's) dream which he refers to in the quote:
"Right now I'm wondering if I have said or done anything amiss. You see, at this moment, everything looks clear to me, but what happened just before, that's what worries me. It's like waking from a dream I just don't remember"
You see Henry Molaison, the most famous patient in neuroscience (Patient HM) could not form long term memories. The Golden Record aboard the Voyager space probe, is (at this moment) the only record of the existence of mankind that will outlive mankind and the solar system. Everything else is just Henry's dream. Something to be experienced but not set to last.
The video uses stills from the Golden Record along with twelve composite images prepared for the project. These are combined with images of Henry's Brain and of memory neurons. The underlying image is of the star field (in constellation Ophiuchus) where Voyager is at present. This picture was taken with the help of the Nordic Optical Telescope in October 2012. A last picture of Voyager on the day the BBC reported it had left the solar system. A huge debt to Supersimmetria's documentary (Voyager). The project uses processed video and audio from that project which itself uses footage from the Voyager project. Other audio is taken from NASA Voyager Space Sounds releases (Symphonies of the Planets - Jupiter). These are mixed in Resolume Arena. Live improvised performances of the piece use the Korg Monotribe Analogue Ribbon Station (v2) to trigger and overlay sounds.
Wednesday, 14 August 2013
Golden Record Gist
I produced a series of images based on combining the photos on the Golden Record. The Golden Record is a cultural memory. Memories change over time and these images attempt to capture that quality. Below is an example:
Other images in the series can be found here.
There are many holes |
Tuesday, 23 July 2013
Migration and Memory Triptych
Combining the photographs from the Migration and Memory Diptych with a third image taken at the Nordic Optical Telescope, this image helps to bring the two ideas of memory and migration together and focuses on the location of the telescope as the point of intersection of two stories - where the microcosm and the macrocosm come together.
Migration and Memory Triptych, 2013 |
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