In an age of digital reproduction, we forget the physical nature of acts of recording, we think of data online as data “out there” rather than as data existing within a very real set of machines, and thus, even as we view information as both existing and not existing, we are further removed from the actual liminal nature of reproduction and recording. We forget how such objects as phonographs all the way to mp3 players make sound perceivable by other senses so that the phenomenon becomes liminal itself– external synaesthesia again. We have become numbed to the way such technologies represent the capturing of temporary phenomenon and thus the transition of such things as sound from fleeting to (relatively) permanent. We can only imagine the sense of in-betweenness felt by those who first recorded sound– that is, until the technology to record some aspect of perception we have not yet imagined being made permanent is developed.
Sphere: Related ContentArchive for March, 2008
On the Threshold of Recorded Sound
Sunday, March 30th, 2008Camera Lucida
Wednesday, March 26th, 2008Wired has a brief piece up about artists using sulfuric acid to create– and capture– sonoluminescence, a phenomenon that by its very nature exists on a threshold. Sound waves create light waves, or sound is transformed into light. Those who witness it experience a sort of externalized synaesthesia, a confusion of the senses reflected in measurable outside reality. This aspect is most obvious in the case of the installations, as the photographs, while indicating the visibility of sound, will be viewed by audiences removed from the time frame of sound.
The photographs, however, develop another sort of hybridity and border space through the immortalization of a short-lived phenomenon. Technically, of course, every photograph does record a vanishing frame, an impermanent state, but the understanding that the clouds of color must have disappeared shortly after a picture was taken allows this sort of subject matter to emphasize the liminal area inhabited by all photography in a way that images of old trees and Ozymandias cannot.
Sphere: Related ContentThe Launch
Tuesday, March 25th, 2008Welcome to the beginning of CRIT’s Night Stream Journey. This blog will endeavor to link Crossing Rivers Into Twilight with other work on similar themes of liminality and transition that appear on and offline or only in our bloggers’ minds.
If you would be interested in joining the voyage as a blogger, please send 1-2 sample posts to critjournal (at) gmail. Multimedia welcome.
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