Two field recordists and soundsculptors, a factory and its history are the ingredients of the project "Plaqué", the first full length release of this project by Andreas Usenbenz & Peter Schubert.
"Plaqué" is a commissioned performance project initiated by Peter Schubert (Geislingen/Steige) and Andreas Usenbenz (Ulm) in 2015". Made to celebrate the 200th anniversary of Daniel Straub's birth. Straub made a large contribution to the industrial development of the city "Geislingen an der Steige" and it's famous construction work, the "Geislinger Steige". During and since it's construction in 1850 it is known as one of the steepest railway lines in Europe.
Schubert & Usenbenz followed the footsteps of Straub's life. Supported by archival material, they went outside to do field recordings that followed his varied life. Based on these self-made sound documents, Usenbenz & Schubert used contemporary composition and production methods to transform the location based media into a sound piece.
Tommi Brem (Curator & Collector)
released December 18, 2017
peter schubert • field recordings • electronics • microgranny analog fx • ableton live • fieldscaper • no-input mixer
andreas usenbenz • field recordings • borderlands • samplr • ableton live
dubplates • cassettes • microkorg • patchblocks
recording • editing • mastering • klangmanufaktur ulm
photography • artwork • andreas usenbenz
distributed by
www.A-Musik.com
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Sound art. In an essay for the Goethe Institute dated 2009, Carsten Seiffarth (of Singuhr gallery, Berlin), called sound art a “new art form”. An art form that is now established but still only plays a marginal role in the art world and in exhibitions. Everybody who visit galleries and art fairs regularly will concur.
Why is that?
For one, many sound art works are intricately connected with the locations they are presented in, which is usually not where art fairs and exhibitions take place, but locations whose atmosphere and history are to be amplified or to be communicated. Or the locations have been specifically constructed, like the Philips pavilion at the world expo in Brussels in 1958, for which Edgard Varese created his Poème électronique.
www.klanggold.net 1
So, works of sound art are often tied to a specific event as well, like “Plaqué”, which has spacial as well as historic roots. When the event is over, the relevance of many sound art works may fade away to a certain degree. In addition, the presentation of sound art often proves difficult in traditional galleries or art fairs. These are usually not designed to adequately present live performances or sound art in general, because sound art's predominant element, sound, is usually not part of the art presented there. In fact, there are only very few galleries that specifically deal with sound art.
While sound installations and more classically laid out compositions may come with a certain potential for longevity (or repeated resurrection), a lot of artists are producing works that are very ephemeral, except for archival recordings, of course. Performed works are often placed on the side stages of music festivals, or they may emerge within a tightly set frame of time and context, outside of which only a documentary shadow remains.
Collectors are struggling with sound art as well. Like with video art, it is not easy to get used to the idea that you may be purchasing a work which can be copied in unlimited numbers at no costs. That's precisely what a recorded piece of sound art is. This parameter as well as the performance aspect of sound art seems to put it on a level with music. But is that appropriate?
A question that could be asked in the case of “Plaqué”. Is it “just” an archival recording of a long gone performance? Like Varese's Poème électronique, “Plaqué” was created for a specific event, the 200th birthday of Daniel Straub, whose endeavours in Geislingen shaped the small German town for decades to come. He was involved in the construction of the railroad line and founded a company called WMF, which produces kitchenware and cutlery to this date.
Usenbenz and Schubert traced Straub's history in the Geislingen of our present. The collected field recordings were presented as a live performance, which served as a preliminary work and a basis for the work now published. “Plaqué” is not just a recorded performance, it is an advanced work, a new composition containing additionally recorded material. It gently loosens its spacial and temporal roots without losing its contextual base. The result is strangely fascinating and universally relevant. It is an independent piece of sound art, which deserves the same form of attention and appreciation as a painting or a sculpture. Even if it's not a unique piece, entering one art collection, but an edition that will be enjoyed by 200 collectors.