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Instructional Art. Scores for Visual Arts

Q

Give me a few examples, where, in painting or another fine art medium, the instructions were used like score in music, thus separating the role of composer and performer. The cases where the composer and performer were the same person are also OK.

ChatGPT

In the realm of painting and fine art, there have been several notable instances where the concept of an “instruction” or “score” was used, akin to the distinction between composer and performer in music. This approach is particularly prevalent in conceptual and performance art, where the idea or concept behind the work often takes precedence over the physical execution.

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The Riverscape

“The notation is more important than the sound. Not the exactitude and the success with which a notation notates a sound; but the musicalness of the notation in its notating.” (Cornelius Cardew)

Nile hr
Los Angeles Port hr
Ganges hr
Danube hr
Nile
Los Angeles Port
Ganges
Danube
 
Nile
Los Angeles Port
Ganges
Danube
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To listen to the recorded performances visit the Riverscape project

 

The Rivescape is a research project investigating and questioning the roles of composer and performer, the auditory nature of the medium of music, and the interdependency between the score and the performance.

The project began as a series of paintings – riverscapes – sighted from above and abstracted to maps, graphically structured to serve as musical scores.

Several musicians have accepted the commission to compose and perform the music based on the paintings-scores:
Shira Legmann, Orr Sinay, Nitai Levi, Shaul Kohn, Tom Klein, Hovav Landoy.
Exposition

The scores created for the project, function in two media at the same time: the medium of painting and the medium of music. While serving as notations for musical compositions, the paintings don’t cease to be perceived as paintings. This creates the possibility of diffusion – the paintings take on musical intentionality, the music aspires to be a transliteration of the visuals.

The meaning shifts start with maps, dropping their purpose to describe a territory in favor of the aesthetic purpose of being pictures. In turn, the pictures, without abandoning their conventional role, take on the musical intent, serving as instructions for composing music.

The resulting score provides musicians with a form, a starting point, a key, a path, a possibility of composing the music. The paintings specify a flow of time but not limit it to any specific length. They also don’t restrict the ways of interpretation of the visual elements: shapes, sizes, colors, textures. The compositional technique is fully open, varying from improvisation, to preparing an intermediary self-score, to digital composing in post production.

The aims of the project can be reduced to three main points:

First: Attempting to construct a situation, where a performer becomes a composer by choosing to play a score. The score is indeterminate, yet it is sophisticated enough to make the transformation (player -> composer) easy by providing a formal structure, starting point and an inspiration.

Second: Trying to create a series of scores that can be perceived as self contained artifacts, possessing an aesthetic value of their own. I intentionally avoid saying “artistic” value, for the word “art” may mean different things for musicians and musical community and for the contemporary, post visual art-world community.

Third: Experimenting with reciprocal causal dependency between a self contained score and a self contained musical composition. That is, just as the painting serves a reason for a musical composition, in the same way the (future) musical composition serves a reason for creating a painting. We can call is a mutual automation.

Rust and Renewal

This series of paintings uses fragments of broken umbrellas and iron filings mixed into the paint. Over time, the iron shards rust, changing their color and texture. This rusting, a result of the oxidation, leads to visible transformations in the paintings. Here, the time is employed as an additional material, necessary for the artwork’s unfolding.

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Umbrella forest
Umbrellas
Umbrella Tree
Smashed mosquito
The morphology of Ma
At Forest Exhibition
 
Smashed Mosquito 2
Umbrella forest
Umbrellas
Umbrella Tree
Smashed mosquito
The morphology of Ma
At Forest Exhibition
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Organic textures merge with mechanical remnants, parts of shattered umbrellas, weaving a narrative canvas filled with tales of change and adaptability. Iron filings mixed into the paint imbue these pieces with a dynamic nature, evolving as rust accumulates and alters hues over time.

The skeleton of an umbrella, once a protector from the elements, is now resurrected. Intertwining with nature’s unpredictable ways and triggered by decay, it starts a process of renewal. These once-abandoned objects are recycled, gaining new purpose and meaning. Their transformation, coupled with the ongoing rusting process, symbolizes a journey beyond the stillness of a ‘finished’ piece.

Within this fusion, as nature slowly addresses the rust, and as the iron shards begin tanning, a story of endurance emerges. Both time and the objects, in their evolving roles, display a capacity for adjustment, seeking equilibrium amidst alteration. This endurance is about persisting and acknowledging new shapes and meanings arising from deterioration, continuously evolving with the deepening shades of decay.

The fragments of umbrellas, part of this new play, take roles in a broader story of change, persistence, and the perpetual fluctuation between order and disarray. This story calls for a deeper examination of the allure found in the unforeseen and invites contemplation of the myriad prospects born from the union of disparate realms, in a form of art that is ceaselessly shifting.