MICHAEL BREWSTER See,
Hear, Now-
a sonic drawing and five acoustic sculptures
Saturday 16 February from 5 pm to 7 pm
LOS ANGELES, December
21, 2001 -- Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions presented See,
Hear, Now-a sonic drawing and five acoustic sculptures, sound-based
installations by Michael Brewster. An opening reception took place
on Saturday 16 February from 5:00 pm to 7:00 pm. For images and
additional information please call 323.957.1777.
Michael Brewster has
been making sound sculptures for three decades. His use of sound
as a medium enables him to provide audiences with fresh awarenesses
of their own participation and engagement with a work of art that
exists in the space around them.
For Brewster, sound is
a four dimensional medium. His work reminds us that sound is physical
and has a measurable volume, width and length, as well as tempo.
Sound also exists as physical energy; waves that move through space
and respond to space in particular ways, bouncing off the walls
and mixing with its own reflections. In discussing the properties
of sound, Brewster explains that "each portion of the spectrum
exhibits unique qualities and behaviors. Low frequency sounds, for
instance, which have long wavelengths, are omnidirectional and volumetric.
High frequency sounds have short wave lengths and are monodirectional
and linear." Brewster cleverly uses this subtle understanding
of the material to create installations that heighten our awareness
of our physicality and our surroundings.
For his project at Los
Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions, initiated and sponsored by the
Fellows of Contemporary Art, Brewster constructed a sound chamber
in which he presented five different "acoustic sculptures"
which last four to six minutes each, operated from a touch screen.
The room was surrounded on the outside by a "sonic drawing"
made by intermittent sound signals coming from six sounders positioned
around the gallery. Brewster challenges the viewer to shift from
the expected "stand and look" behavior to an exploratory
"move and listen" approach; slowly walking our ears, instead
of moving our eyes, through the acoustically produced exhibit.
Brewster has said, "I
work with sound’s spatial effects to promote the appreciation
of sculptural sensations of space instead of objects. My two series,
the Sonic Drawings and the Acoustic Sculptures, use sound to generate
expanded experiences of drawing and sculpture." He describes
the sonic drawings as the intertwining of unpredictable "events"
which are produced by the soundings of separate, individual clicking
or whistling sources. The sounds draw our attention around the room
as they toy with our expectations and our sense of timing. Acoustic
sculpture is a mix of electronic tones emitted into a bare room
by a single loudspeaker. The sounds, echoing through each other,
create zones of differing loudnesses and tonal content.
Along with artists involved
in the Light and Space Movement in California in the 1960s, Brewster
became interested in exploring the boundaries of phenomenological
experience as a means of providing the viewer with a cognitive awareness
of how the process of our perceptions conditions our imaginations
and our understandings of an art work. Using sound to create a perceptual
field as opposed to an object also established a kind of secondary,
imaginary visual experience as well as the primary aural one. Instead
of walking around a sculptural object, the experience of Brewster's
work requires us to move through the sound as a sculptural material,
one that allows us to explore it from within. His work establishes
a unique dynamic between viewer and artwork.
Michael Brewster is Professor
of Art at Claremont Graduate University where he has taught since
1973. He has exhibited throughout the United States and Europe as
well as in Canada and Australia. Brewster has received numerous
grants and awards including a Guggenheim Fellowship (1988).
The exhibition and catalogue
were initiated and sponsored by the Fellows of Contemporary Art.
Matching funds were provided by Irene and Jerry Barr, Catherine
B. Chester, Homeira and Arnold Goldstein, Phyllis and John Kleinberg,
Peggy and Bernard Lewak, Ann and Bob Myers, Cathie and David Partridge,
Peggy Phelps and Nelson Leonard, Joan B. Rehnborg, Laurie Smits
Staude, and Donna Vaccarino, AIA.