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JORINDE VOIGT
PATRIC CATANI
CHRIS IMLER
MATRIX & LEMNISCATE
14.11.2008 - 20.12.2008
Click here to play lemniscate
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Galerie Christian Lethert is excited to present Matrix & Lemniscate
- a unique collaboration between the artist Jorinde Voigt, and
composers Patric Catani and Chris Imler. The lemniscate is,
fundamentally a mechanism for the infinite. A lemniscus or “ribbon”
that chases itself in a figure of eight describes the repeated and
unending journey of the unbounded. Early Indian thinkers were quick to
assert the abstract powers of infinities by recognising that when
adding or removing parts to infinity, infinity would always remain.
Jorinde Voigt draws structures energised by real and imagined
possibilities to investigate finite boundaries of systems. She frames
and moderates these investigations with spatiotemporal data,
information on speed, volume, and an overlaying of sequences. Her
notations embrace the concept that elements of equal value co-exist in
a logic and proportion of their own.
It is interesting to note then, that the lemniscate’s form derives
itself from an ellipse, a figure wherein the sum of its distances to
two fixed points is a constant. The French philosopher Descartes,
turned these spatial observations into the grounding principles of his
Cartesian system of thinking which saw the merging of algebra and
geometry. For Voigt, whose earlier drawn notations were reminiscent of
equations, her current work has developed to propose a highly inventive
form of ‘situational geometry’, where patterns of cultural behaviour
are put into relative position to geographical properties of space. As
Cartesian thinking influenced not only mathematics but also the science
of map drawing, Voigt’s drawings or ‘scores,’ have left the paper for
the Lemniscate project and begun to take place in space and time.
Following Voigt’s concepts, composers Patric Catani and Chris Imler,
have laid the ‘lazy 8’ of the infinity motif into the gallery space in
the form of an acoustic ‘cluster’. The looped composition formed of 16
chapters, snakes around 7 points realised using a multi-channel
arrangement of 5 loudspeakers and thus describes the shape of a
lemnsicate through pure sound. With their insight into musical forms,
Catani and Imler made both field recordings that included the
surrounding cityscape of Berlin and also initiated their own sources of
sound. These tones and frequencies have then been layered at varying
speeds and rhythms to construct a shifting musical ‘swarm’ (evocative
maybe of the flocks of multiple elements in Voigt’s drawings). Standing
in the centre of this work, the effect is of an architected, geometric
form - sensed but not seen, and entirely physical in its scale (the
cluster of sound existing between the ground and head height). At the
core of the Lemniscate composition is Catani and Imler’s structural
break up of a tonal construction as the various layers shift and chase
themselves around a physical space.
Within this physical space, Voigt’s works on paper: Schwarm and Matrix
also co-exist alongside the Lemniscate installation. Existing in their
own right, the drawings serve to have initiated discussions about
principles of collective movement, challenging Catani and Imler with a
creative platform through which to develop Lemniscate. The large scale
Schwarm series concerns itself with many features of Voigt’s previous
notations: kisses, detonations, wind speeds, the flight of eagles, but
examines how these singular events may take place in a larger course of
action. These works deal with the duplication of
forms within plural forces such as energy, wind force and collective
direction. Dynamic processes are inherent in these notations. Totalling
40 works on paper, Matrix proposes an extended system of the Schwarm
series, whereby clustered elements of this large series are isolated
and matrixed. It is in these drawings that Voigt gives an intimate
treatment to these actions and the notion of the point of view is
prevalent.
In answering the classic paradox “what happens if an unstoppable force
meets an immovable object?” Isaac Asimov hints at both forces
transferring their infinite energies into one another. Voigt, Catani
and Imler may offer up the alternate question “what happens if the
mortal individual is confronted by unending flux?”. Matrix &
Lemniscate speaks both of our material and animal existence in the face
of an everadvancing immaterial world and of the micro and finite
condition of the human, in relation to an overall and infinite passing
of time. Lemniscate was created 2008 (in part) at Watermill – Center,
NY, a laboratory for performance.
Andrew Cannon
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