Frequency and Volume

Relational Architecture 9
Frequency and Volume enables participants to tune into and listen to different radio frequencies by using their own bodies. A computerised tracking system detects participants' shadows, which are projected on a wall of the exhibition space. The shadows scan the radio waves with their presence and position, while their size controls the volume of the signal. The piece can tune into any frequency between 150 kHz and 1.5 GHz, including air traffic control, FM, AM, short wave, cellular, CB, satellite, wireless telecommunication systems and radio navigation. Up to 48 frequencies can be tuned simultaneously and the resulting sound environment forms a composition controlled by people's movements. This piece visualizes the radioelectric spectrum and turns the human body into an antenna. All the receiver equipment used and antennae are exhibited in an adjacent room.

The project was developed at a time when the Mexican Government was very active in shutting down informal or "pirate" radio stations in indigenous communities in the states of Chiapas and Guerrero. The question "who has access to the public space that is the radioelectric spectrum" is one that deserves attention and visualization tools not just in Mexico but also here in the developed world, where there is a remarkable assymmetry in the assignation of frequencies only to government or corporate interests to the detriment of community-building, experimental or artistic uses of the spectrum. This project was inspired by the "Manifesto for Antenna-Man" and the radio poetry experiments by the Mexican estridentista artists in the 1920s.
Name in spanish: Frecuencia y Volumen
Year of Creation: 2003
Technique: Projectors, cameras, computers, radioelectric scanners, antennae, radios and 48 channel sound system
Dimensions: Variable dimensions
Keywords: shadows, projections, indoor, tracker.
Collections: Fundación Sorigue (Lleida) and Jonathon Carroll Collection (NYC)
Photo library (click to expand)
2011 - La Gaîté Lyrique, Paris, France
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2011 - "Open House", Singapore Art Museum, Singapore, Singapore
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2007 - Mexican Pavilion, 52 Biennale di Venezia, Venice, Italy
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2005 - Elektra Festival, Musée d'Art Contemporain, Montréal, Canada
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2003 - Laboratorio Arte Alameda, Mexico City, México
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Exhibitions

  • Frequency and Volume, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco, California, United States, 2012 - 2013.
  • "Espectros", Arts Santa Mònica, Barcelona, Spain, 2011 - 2012.
  • Trackers, La Gaîté Lyrique, Paris, France, 2011.
  • "Open House": Singapore Biennale 2011, Singapore Art Museum, Singapore, Singapore, 2011.
  • "The World is Yours", Louisiana Museum, Copenhagen, Denmark, 2009.
  • "Open Space", NTT InterCommunication Center (ICC), Tokyo, Japan, 2009.
  • Frequency and Volume, The Curve, Barbican Centre, London, United Kingdom, 2008.
    1. Commissioned by Kate Rich.
  • "Some Things Happen More Often Than All Of The Time", Mexican Pavilion, 52 Biennale di Venezia, Venice, Italy, 2007.
  • "Art Meets Media", NTT InterCommunication Center (ICC), Tokyo, Japan, 2005.
  • Elektra Festival, Musée d'Art Contemporain, Montréal, Québec, Canada, 2005.
  • "Navigator exhibition", National Taiwan Museum of Fine Arts, Taichung, Taiwan, 2004.
  • "Relational Architectures", Laboratorio Arte Alameda, Mexico City, México, 2003.

Credits

  • Rafael Lozano-Hemmer - Direction
  • Conroy Badger - Programming
  • Andrew Welburn, Matthew Biederman, Natalie Bouchard, Emily Bates, David Lemieux, Stephan Schulz - Production assistance
  • Helmut Riexinger, Winradio - Frequency scanning support
  • Originally commissioned in 2003 by Laboratorio Arte Alameda (Priamo Lozada, curator) in Mexico City.

Bibliography

  • Baillargeon, Stéphane, "Le globe-trotter des arts", Montréal, Québec, Canada, May 14th 2007 (français). Text of 2 pages. (Newspaper)
  • Bosco, Roberta and Caldana, Stefano, "Lozano-Hemmer crea para el MOCA su primera obra totalmente en red", Madrid, España, July 8th 2004 (español). Text of 1 page. (Newspaper)
  • Fernández, Maria, Illuminating Embodiement: Rafael Lozano-Hemmer’s Relational Architectures, 2007 (english). Text of 10 pages. (Magazine)
  • Hernández, Edgar A., "Cae en coma, curador de la bienal veneciana", Mexico City, México, June 6th 2007 (español). Text of 1 page. (Newspaper)
  • Jezik, Enrique, Rafael Lozano-Hemmer – Laboratorio Arte Alameda, 2003 (english and español). Text of 1 page. (Magazine)
  • Malvido, Adriana, Rafael Lozano-Hemmer – De luz y ondas sonoras, 2004 (español). Text of 1 page. (Magazine)
  • Mayer, Mónica, "Rafael Lozano-Hemmer: ¡el Ana Guevara de las artes visuales!", Mexico City, México, June 14th 2003 (español). Text of 1 page. (Newspaper)
  • Medina, Cuauhtémoc, "Participación y persecución", Mexico City, México, November 3rd 2004 (español). Text of 1 page. (Newspaper)
  • spacer  Medina, Pedro, "Migrations between Memory and Spectacle", Madrid, España, 2007 (english). Text of 3 pages. (Book)
  • Paul, Carlos, "México vuelve a la Bienal de Venecia tras una ausencia de más de 50 años", Mexico City, México, June 6th 2007 (español). Text of 1 page. (Newspaper)
  • Tolic, Ines, "Rafael Lozano-Hemmer at the 52nd international art exhibition in Venice", Milan, Italia, August 2008 (english and italiano). Text of 6 pages. (Newspaper)
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