Tag Archives: Time Based

> pås-performance

2023

A performance composed for the opening of Dear swarm-I, a room swarmning of we-me-s performed by Jaana-Kristiina Alakoski, Marcus Doverud, Niels Engström and Liv Strand
Duration about 20 minutes

Four folded large scale paper bags get presented as the performance matter. The performers make vocal sounds, mimicking the sounds of the crackling paper as close as a human mouth possible can. Audiable not so near as the constitution of the human mouth and vocal cords differ from smooth strong paper.

After a while the performers enter the paper bags, one by one, and move around. As bags, as the content they form. As content they are disguised, their individual movements compose the purpose. This goes on until they re-appear and leave their quite warn paper bags huddeling behind.

Video of the performance

veckad rytm

2020 and ongoing

Veckad rytm premiered under the umbrella project PublikMusik at SITE/Specific festival at Hallen in Farsta, Stockholm 2020, and played again at Weld 2021 and in the exhibition Dear Swarm I… @celsiusprojects, Malmö, 2022.
In 2023 Veckad rytm was shared in several great contexts, as the Abysse festival at Handenterminalen, Haninge, at Hana Erdmann’s music salon and in the festive event of the
90 years celebration of Fylkingen, the prominent experimental stage in Stockholm.

In Veckad rytm, the sound of the paper is inserted into a rhythm-creating practice with Marcus Doverud and Liv Strand. Doing as a way to know.

As to its composition Veckad rytm is spatial, choreographic and material. Brought together by means of improvisation, were different sound worlds and sonic cultures meet, clash and resonates with each other. A sonorous crinkle, meets a rhythmic lick. An aggressive shaking paper body, like rustling leaves, meets the dryness of a drumhead. A suggestive beat, a deflated sound. It is in and through the listening this “music” emerges. Juxtaposing the routinely performed practice of a pattern and the momentous emergence pose questions to the composite of body, space, materials and performance. The composition is the continuous sonorous comparing and juxtaposing, performed through improvisation. Improvisation as the boldness of not knowing what will happen next, and also improvisation as being able to act out of the prior knowledge one has.

The origin of our collaboration veckad rytm was project PublikMusik #1-3, in 2020 curated and choreographed by Marcus Doverud together with Anna Lindal, Roberto N Peyre and Liv Strand.
PublikMusik is a project by Marcus Doverud in care for choreographic and music practices that complicate virtuosity in relation to listening and playing. Studying and mixing competence from different fields we make compositions of sound, movement and materials. A playing-field for thinking with music through choreographic composition. And an attempt to deploy the possible democratic potency of seeing and listening together in a room.
Read more about:
Marcus Doverud
Anna Lindal

Roberto N Peyre

Video of performance at Hana Erdmann’s music salon, summer 2023

A Walk in the Park

2019

Performance A Walk in the Park was part of the program A Common Ground at The Queens Museum and took place as a guided walk in Flushing Meadows-Corona Park.

In relation to the over arching project The Trans Atlantic Meeting on Nationalism(s), which
A Common Ground
was part of, I formulated and held the workshop Migrating Roots aiming to share practices and experiences of belonging and nationalism. It took place at the Finnish Institute in NYC.
Curators Susanne Ewerlöf & Carmen Ferreyra, Curatorial Program for Research.

A Walk in the Park in the Flushing Meadow-Corona Park as a text:
Exit the Queens Museum of Art and enter into the park, the Flushing Meadow-Corona Park. Leaving the architecture behind, the straight vertical surfaces get replaced by shifting green. And brown obstacles and enclosing bodies of growth. What is the façade of a park, a green space? If it shows a specific era, it does so to initiated persons with garden knowledge. Perhaps it presents local crops and native plants, maybe in mix with migrating trees and flowers. Brought across the planet because their beauty, their willingness to grow, or other reasons. An architectural façade shows power, it shows a level of maintenance and perhaps neglect of attention. The façade is an impression, a presentation, an aesthetic identity of that single place. The façade of the park is more on the ground, in the layout of green surfaces and pathways.

The layout of the Flushing Meadow-Corona Park rests on several histories. It was the location for two New York’s World Fairs, one in 1939-40 and the next in 1964-65. Both echo in the naming of the streets crossing through the park: close up to the Queens Museum is the Avenue of the States. Enclosing the Unisphere monument is the United Nations Avenues North and South, and radiating out from the Unisphere runs the Avenue of the Americas (towards north) and the Avenue of Africa. All spread as a map of the world collected in a green space. This way of naming speaks of times when the world was still considered to be ONE, an entity with one truth, one (best) way of thinking and reasoning. A park, as well as a city, is as much a process as the bricks and seemingly solid surfaces it is made of. The Maloof Skate Park a bit to the south from here is under reconstruction, and there the sign speaks three languages: English, Russian and Chinese. This tells about who the guests, or users, of this park is today. Not one, but several cultures gather here. A being the activity carried out there, the sports, the slow walks, the barbecues, the blankets for resting several hours.

Let us move closer to the Unisphere. It was constructed by landscape architect Gilmore D. Clarke who was the landscape architect for a handful parks in NYC. It was raised for the World Fair in 1964. The competition amongst a handful artists for a monument failed, none of the artistic answers were the wanted one, so Gilmore D. Clarke was asked to solve the situation. What is even more pragmatic about this monument is that it was built for free by US Steel Corporation, in exchange for having their name on the plackets permanently. The Unisphere is a see-through globe in steel and tree metallic lines encircle it representing the three first satellites. This was the dawn of the space battles; to be first, reach furthest away etc. Echoing with renewed strength in our times, now with rouge states sending shuttles to the moon and corporations joining. Here by the Unisphere we can all get a splash of the joy of this technical advances, as a cooling water fume spreads by the winds.

Lets walk on. Look at these trees, they have been here for a long time. I especially like the pine tree over there. Trees move towards empty spaces up in the air, where they can spread their leaves or pine needles and meet the sun rays. They only wanders from one generations seed as far as that can get carried by a bird, the wind or an adventurer. Think of a tree you know well, growing somewhere else than here. Take your time an close your eyes and remember that tree. The colours, the micro climate around or beneath it.

Now we approach the Freedom of Human Spirit, sculpted by Marshall Fredericks 1964. He was an artist from the United States that travelled to Europe for more artistic education, as was the code of his time. One figure of influence for his artistic development was the Swedish artist Carl Milles, who also made these kind of flying, detached fairy-like human creatures. Carl Milles who were accused of being a nazi in the beginning of WW2, and that also reminds of a time where there still was ONE truth, constructed by the power nations of Europe and perhaps even by the US. After WW2 the US definitely was on top of the world. The name of the sculpture: the Freedom of Human Spirit, talks about ideals of Freedom and here I like to quote what Marshall Fredericks himself said about the sculpture:
“I realized that great multitudes of people, of all ages, and from all walks of life would see this sculpture…I tried to design the work so that it was as free of the earth, as free in space as possible…the thought that we can free ourselves from earth, from the material forces which try to restrain and hamper us, is a happy, encouraging and inspiring one, and I sincerely hope that my work will convey this message.”

The detachment to a place that both the figures in the sculpture show is quite different from present concerns about first nations and about the more problematic ramifications the notion of one land, one people with one language and a shared history, formed into nation states, has. I rather get connected and look for peers where interests that can be shared, no matter origin. In our times the sense of being rooted is higher valued than to be free to fly away. Now I get myself messed up in speaking about this in general. A singular narrative forms a place, a location. I get formed by the persons I meet.

The nation state as a form for creating ownership of land. And rules for the ones living there. Normative truth as mechanisms for how we learn reasoning. And the very hard task to collectively imagine some other structures. Together.

Talking about the park as a process, I want us to visit a more recent grove just over here. It is the American-Israeli Friendship Grove, that was completed as late as in 1995. It is created as a tribute to the forming of the nation of Israel in 1948. Israel as a young state, a one-sided formation by the Jewish Agency, after suggestions by the UN 1947. Forming a state on land that was inhabited also by other cultures, with other hopes and wishes for their rule. Israel, as an idea and as reality, was rejected The Arab leaders. History knows about the 6-days war in 1967, and about that the territory still holds several claimers to be the rightful power. Or co-powers. In this part of the park is planted native trees from America and from Israel, a green meeting. Here is also a tree from Lebanon included in the grove, as Lebanon stayed neutral in the war of 1967. Coming from Sweden I can relate to the tricky balance of being a so called neutral nation (even if my father is Norwegian and his family was clearly involved in WW2). In Israel they dig certain layers in their archaeological strive to prove the Jewish right of the lands to be the strongest. Physically. It is a struggle using a mid 18th century idea on previous history, using history for contemporary purposes in a very out spoken manner.

Text written August 2019 in Stockholm.
This script is a construction concluded a month after the actual performance walk A Walk in the Park took place in the Flushing Meadow-Corona Park. It is made from my intensions, my notes and research for the improvised walk. A walk that did not start at the entrance to the park from the Queens Museum, but was conducted in reverse, as we had to leave at the main entrance to a sunny parking lot and a trafficked highway. So, it functions as a script of a lot that was mentioned, some forgotten, and some material that I wished for, or intended to, include.

Signals

2016

S i g n a l s  was an evening I arranged together with Isabel Carvalho (PT) and Jelena Rundqvist (SE) at NFK’s guest studio in Stockholm

S i g n a l s

The invitation red:
We invite you to attend an evening where the attention goes to the mutual concern between people and things. (Imagine) Touching a thing with some shape and a certain material making up the surface. The sensation comes along with prior knowledge, its formulations along with a curiosity, going towards the not yet known, placed in the present moment. Learning and/or confirming. It browses the catalogue of stuff put in our mouth as kids, all one knows about textures. It browses and add news. When describing what happens for someone else communication starts and it is also a material. Gestures, words, texts etc.

S i g n a l s is a programmed evening with two acts at Malongen, and one guided out-door tour. The works handle objects, text and actions providing assiduities in a socio-cultural sphere.

Isabel Carvalho (PT), Jelena Rundqvist (SE) and Liv Strand (SE) will appear with art works during the evening. This event spurs from a summer month working in parallel with a concern for links between objects and text. Isabel Carvalho (PT) visited in July, and then some meetings on text and its materiality was arranged for a larger group of colleagues.

Tja chat, tjena chien, concerning mimetic displacement

2016

Performance work, duration about 30 to 40 minutes

Has been performed at ‘Revolve’ Uppsala performance festival at Uppsala konstmuseum and at Inter Arts Center in Malmö 2016. And in 2017 at My Wild Flag festival in collaboration with Studiekretz @ C.off and ccap, and at Samtidskonstdagarna in Kalmar, invited by Kalmar Konstmuseum and Konstfrämjandet.

‘Tja chat tjena chien, concerning mimetic displacement’ (Tja chat, tjena chien, om härmning som förskjutning) departs from mime as a concept and a form of delivery. How something can be brought to experience and be understood, coexists with what it is to expose something through embodying it. Giving it another body. The displacement that the mimes brings about has to do with an embodiment. Basic to mime as stage performance is that another body, the imitating one, show a facet of what is mimed. In the work ‘Tja chat tjena chien, concerning mimetic displacement’ imitation also happens by stories we tell. What does it mean to do something together, what it is to become a we? In relation to a climate of increasing competition and focus of the individual, choreographer Marcus Doverud and artist Liv Strand, made this works dealing with intrapersonal influences.

Video from Tja Chat, Tjena Chien, Concerning Mimetic Displacement

Tur_tur

2014

The art walk Tur_tur was made as a tour for a smaller group to join. The word ‘Tur’ is Norwegian for walk; a rather lengthy walk preferably in nature. Tur_tur was developed for ‘How Green Was My Valley’, aiPotu‘s out door part of the Vevringutstillinga, as a work where I and the participants tried to become “local” together. One aspect of  Tur_tur was to try out as much as possible, in the sense of aiming as little information or back ground, that was needed for people to be able to feel comfortable accompanying the work. A few moments were very close to something very very (too) loose, and embarrassing. I enjoyed that enormously.

Different stops:
People were asked to come along for a sensorial walk and then we started warming up and jumping activating the bodies. A series of event followed: touching the bark of a birch while eating a buckwheat pop, dryness. Walking in somebody else’s style, same length of steps accordingly bending the knees elevating the foot a specific distance from the ground. Standing directing ones body and gaze one way, letting ears wide listen to a text read, projected from behind. Entering a small cottage for a turbine, a tiny waterfall steaming beneath, let your hand squeeze a pine cone and eat soft drink pops popping soundingly internally in your skull.

A page out of Peter Weiss’ book Exile was read aloud. This page tell about how his nanny Auguste discover the world along with him: not knowing more than him about how things function. They speculate together, they drift equally through the city and thoughts. Thinking, location and language on the move. I stop reading aloud as he states ‘that at that exact moment (…) an urge for an independent achievement was established’.

Textile Location

2014

Perfomance art work that premiered at PALS performance art festival 2014 in Stockholm.
Also showed 2014 at Slakthuset performance program, at Sunday Run_Up at Svarta Huset; and a performance program celebrating ccap 20 years and at Agora Collective, Berlin, 2015 as a Foreplay event.

Textile Location is a performance work with a huge white and red striped textile and a costume that allow the artist to blend into the color fields. The alignment of costume and textile prescribe the movements. There are two different modes of changing from red to white – with a frontal shift, or by a slow half-circle backwards spinning around the shoulder.

Pieces of texts is written to be recited or read as a fundamental part of the performance. The texts deal with binary situations: the two, and tells about various kinds of spatiality.

Excerpts from text recited and read:
(101)
To sense somebody’s grimaces: and just by the movement of the limbs apprehend that it is on it’s way. The coming about of the event reflects in the shivering finger-tips, enforced by a prolonged abdomen –reaching in the direction of a face– then it dazzle instantly, in other muscular tensions than usual. A grimace. A crisp meaning or a contraction that rather informs inward to ones own body. The outward grimace as an imitation or an echo of an internal circumstance.

(102)
A binary situation.
One distinct difference is established.
The same width and length, forming a striped unity where one color field is contiguous to the next. They touch without blending.

(304)
Walking the beach without haste.
Along with… At one-hand-side water spreading out to an ocean.
The waves hit at a pace, the steps drums another.
A trot, a stroll undoubtedly focused: along the beach.
Mediterranean rim, the border of land. Landing conquest. Confront.
The waves roll in, caressing the shore and pulling-it-out-into-the-sea again.
I count on the seventh wave.
They differ in accuracy, there are middle waves and irregular spacings.

Suddenly the presence of color: a pink, a cerise, a green, a yellow-white, a red sweaters in the fisherman’s boat.
They go outward, outgoing. Transversely.

Drum Session –Non Cover

2013

One day drum session in the exhibition Non Cover.

A drum session took place in the exhibition Non Cover. A group consisting of Axel, Marcus, Tilda and Pär created rhythms – or not – together with the artist. There were not any specific rhythms that we had tried to learn. There were some cues for how to listen and think about intensity. We all had personal ways to relate to what drumming could be. The session was as much on how to form a group in drumming, as on drumming as sequences of sounds.

score for drum session

spoken… 1, 2 + 3

2013

spoken versions 1, 2 + 3 was created for the exhibition The Embassy Reconstructed at the Nordic Embassies in Berlin as part of Transmediale 2013 BWPWAP

This sound work poses questions related to the notion of “internationalism”. It relates to reoccurring periods dedicated to study mechanisms that are involved in nation-building, also involving making sculptures during the course of the process.

How does the formalized structure of communication between nations and head of states via embassies contain ideas of internationalism? How does it relate to a globalized world where the flow of things, money, ideas and ideals aims to be unbound? At the same time as the restrictions for persons to move are tighten. How are people included on a diplomatic level, who are the “we” and who are the “them”? The piece spoken versions 1, 2 + 3 composes a collage out of a series of interviews with employees at the Nordic Embassies, printed as a CD that was handed out during the exhibition.