Auditory Borderlands – sounding The Dusk Meridian

The Dusk Meridian installation at night. Stumps on puddle shaped platforms are placed alongside a quarter scale log cabin and half scale wooden fire tower. There is a pool of water on the ground that reflects the sculptures, and the area is washed in red and yellow light.

Auditory Borderlands – sounding The Dusk Meridian – Apr. 28. 2022

Co-presented with Vancouver Art Gallery

Thursday, April 28, 2022; 8:15pm introduction, 8:30pm performance

Vancouver Art Gallery Offsite (1100 W Georgia Street) [map]
Free event

Vancouver Art Gallery Offsite in collaboration with Vancouver New Music co-presents Auditory Borderlands – sounding The Dusk Meridian. We invite the public to gather safely outdoors for this special event.

 

Taking the sculptural and lighting elements of Keith Langergraber’s installation, The Dusk Meridian, as a polydimensional score, an ensemble of Vancouver-based musicians will create an ambient musical reading of the piece. The musicians will be arranged within the plaza to create an immersive spatial experience, and audience members will be encouraged to move through the space to create their own uniquely shifting aural and visual perspectives.

Performed by Adrian Avandaño, Matthew Ariaratnam, Ross Birdwise, Soressa Gardner and prOphecy sun.

Listen to fever haze in a broken ecology by Sounding the Dusk Meridian; an album of music inspired by this live performance.

Offsite is organized by the Vancouver Art Gallery on behalf of the City of Vancouver Public Art Program. The Gallery recognizes Ian Gillespie, President, Westbank; Ben Yeung, President, Peterson Investment Group; and the residents of the Shangri-La for their support of this space.

 

Vancouver Art Gallery.

About the Artists

Matthew Ariaratnam

Matthew Ariaratnam. Man with dark hair and dark longsleeve top and pants kneels on the ground holding a guitar. He is using one hand to adjust knobs on effects pedals.

Matthew Ariaratnam. Photo by Jack Perkins.

Matthew Ariaratnam is an interdisciplinary sound artist, composer, guitarist, and listener based on the unceded traditional territories of the Coast Salish peoples of the xʷməθkwəy̓əm (Musqueam), Skwxwú7mesh (Squamish), and Səl̓ílwətaɬ (Tsleil-Waututh) First Nations – also known as Vancouver, BC. He creates sensory walks, writes dumbpop and chamber music, and frequently collaborates with choreographers, visual artists, and theatre-makers.

Recent projects and commissions include: kiitos, äiti (Thin Edge New Music Collective), The View From Here (Jillian Peever/Sasha Ivanochko) Plastic Me (Naishi Wang), Body Tuning (Vines Art Festival), Creative Music Series 10 (NOW Society), Take Good Care (as dumbpop), Isolation Commission (Little Chamber Music Society), Altar :=: Source (Music on Main), and How long will these sounds sound? (Artist-in-Residence, North Vancouver Recreation and Culture). He has an MFA from Simon Fraser University and a BMus in Music Composition from Wilfrid Laurier University.

www.matthewariaratnam.wordpress.com

Adrian Avendaño

Adrian Avendaño. Man with long dark hair in a pink and blue vertically striped, button up short sleeve top and dark pants plays a snare drum

Adrian Avandaño. Photo by Alisha Weng.

Adrian Avendaño is an emerging sound artist, musician and recordist based in Surrey / Vancouver, Canada [unceded First Nation territories]. Recent projects include Parallel 03 with experimental music duo ENDLINGS (Raven Chacon and John Dietriech of Deerhoof) alongside musicians of the Vancouver creative music community. He was the recipient of the Canada Council for the Arts: Digital Originals funding initiative working with Chilean sound artists Tebo Henriquez and Bastian Diaz. Port Parallels – Acoustic Meridians was a remote collaboration exploring open-source hardware and software to develop methods of interpreting graphic and animated scores. He was a performer and composer for John Brennan’s Rudiments for Hexadrome performance and installation project for the 2021 Vancouver International Jazz Festival. He currently plays with Gamelan Bike Bike and will be studying traditional Korean drumming with Dr. Peter Joon Park.

https://avendanosounds.wordpress.com/

Ross Birdwise

Ross Birdwise. Black and white portrait photo of a man with a short dark beard facing right. He is wearing a black toque and black shirt.Ross Birdwise is a Vancouver-based musician and occasional visual artist. Much of his recent electronic music in various idioms is concerned with the deliberate manipulation of the listener’s sense of time and space and is concerned with disrupting, loosening or expanding the grid that underlies much electronic music to attempt to create musical space-times that can range from fluid, lurching, layered, grooving, malfunctioning, hypnotic, awkward, aggressive, soft, rigid or organic. As an improviser he has been using his voice and electronics to do explorations into non-idiomatic improvisation, structured improvisation, and lo-fi approaches to spatialized sound. 

Ross has played music festivals such as Mutek (Montreal), Soundasaurus (Calgary), Electric Fields (Ottawa), Vancouver New Music and has presented visual art at centres such as VIVO Media Arts (Vancouver) and Gallery 101 (Ottawa). He holds an MAA in Media Arts from Emily Carr, and a BFA from Ottawa University.

https://rossbirdwise.bandcamp.com/
https://birdwise.tumblr.com/media

Soressa Gardner

Soressa Gardner. Image of a woman's head and shoulders looking from below. She has long salt and pepper hair, glasses and a dark top. There is a stained glass window with repeating diamond and oblong shapes behind her.

Soressa Gardner.

Soressa Gardner is vocalist, laptop composer/improvisor, and sometimes songwriter. Her keen sense of mood, colour, humour and gravitas are expressed through extended vocals enhanced by electronic manipulations and sound-worlds carefully crafted from a variety of audio processing techniques. Soressa’s recent live performances include Victoria’s Neuztec Festival (2021) Wonderment Festival (2020), Vancouver New Music Festival: Resonances (2019, The Annex) and CoexistDance: Western Edition #2 (2019, ScotiaDance Centre). Her electronic compositions have garnered international recognition and airplay.

A  Vancouverite by birth, Soressa holds a music degree from Vancouver Community College and currently resides in Victoria, BC, Canada.

https://soressa.com
https://soressa.bandcamp.com

prOphecy sun

prOphecy sun. Woman with light brown hair pulled up and dark eye makeup sings into a handheld mic. The image has a distressed overlay, making it appear crackled.

prOphecy sun.

prOphecy sun (Ph.D.) is an interdisciplinary performance artist, queer, movement, video, sound maker, and mother. Her practice celebrates both conscious and unconscious moments and the vulnerable spaces of the in-between in which art, performance, and life overlap. Her recent research has focused on ecofeminist perspectives, co-composing with voice, objects, surveillance technologies, and site-specific engagements along the Columbia Basin region and beyond. She hosts Tapes and Beyond on Kootenay Co-op Radio and is the Arts Editor for Ecocene: Cappadocia Journal of Environmental Humanities. She performs and exhibits regularly in local, national, and international settings, music festivals, conferences, and galleries and has authored several peer-reviewed articles, book chapters, and journal publications on sound, performance, and the entanglement of domestic spheres.

https://prophecysun.com
https://soundcloud.com/prophecy-sun

Keith Langergraber

Keith Langergraber studied at the University of Victoria and the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, and currently teaches at the Emily Carr University of Art + Design, Vancouver. His research-based practice draws upon disparate references that run from utopian and dystopian literature, art history and outsider subcultures to the narratives embedded in a particular site. His work has been exhibited widely in Canada and abroad over the past twenty years.

keithlangergraber.com

Top photo: Keith Langergraber, The Dusk Meridian, 2021, site-specific installation at Vancouver Art Gallery Offsite. Photo: Ian Lefebvre, Vancouver Art Gallery