Bill Fontana – Artist's Statement
I have worked for the past 30 years creating installations that use
sound as a sculptural medium to interact with and transform our
perceptions of visual and architectural settings. These have been
installed in public spaces and museums around the world including
San Francisco, New York, Paris, London, Berlin, Venice, Sydney
and Tokyo.
My sound sculptures use the human and/or natural environment as a
living source of musical information. I am assuming that at any given
moment there will be something meaningful to hear and that music,
in the sense of coherent sound patterns, is a process that is going
on constantly. My methodology has been to create networks of simultaneous
listening points that relay real time acoustic data to a common listening
zone (sculpture site). Since 1976 I have called these works sound
sculptures.
I have produced a large number of works that explore the idea of
creating live listening networks. These all use a hybrid mix of transmission
technologies that connect multiple sound retrieval points to a central
reception point. What is significant in this process are the conceptual
links determining the relationships between the selected listening
points and the site-specific qualities of the reception point (sculpture
site). Some conceptual strategies have been acoustic memory, the
total transformation of the visible (retinal) by the invisible (sound),
hearing as far as one can see, the relationship of the speed of sound
to the speed of light, and the deconstruction of our perception of
time.
From the late 90”s until the present my projects have explored hybrid
listening technologies of acoustic microphones, underwater sensors
(hydrophones) and structural/material sensors (accelerometers). I
have also realized and am developing projects that access live seismic
networks to explore the sound energy of ocean waves, traveling long
distances underground.
For further information see Bill Fontana's own website - http://www.resoundings.org

