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Tate Britain Exhibition

Susan Philipsz: War Damaged Musical Instruments

21 November 2015 – 3 April 2016
Susan Philipsz: War Damaged Musical Instruments, Tate Britain commission

Bild 10Alto Saxaphone (ruin)Brass silveredOnly the bell with two valves preservedSalvaged from the Alte Münz bunker, Berlin, 1945

Collection Musikinstrumenten-Museum Berlin

Susan Philipsz: War Damaged Musical Instruments, Tate Britain commission

War damaged musical instrument from 'Susan Philipsz: War Damaged Musical Instruments'

Photograph of a damaged klappenhorn

Susan Philipsz Bild 5

Photograph of a silver damaged horn on a white background

Susan Philipsz Bild 7

Photograph of silver damaged trumpet on a white background

Susan Philipsz Bild 9 damaged trumpet

Photograph of Susan Philipsz standing in front of the installation with the speakers behind her

Susan Philipsz portrait in front of War Damaged Instruments

Installation shot of Susan Philipsz War Damaged Instruments

Installation shot of Susan Philipsz War Damaged Instruments

Susan Philipsz War Damaged Instruments installation shot

Susan Philipsz War Damaged Instruments installation shot

A woman stands and looks at the Susan Philipsz installation

Susan Philipsz War Damaged Instruments installation shot

Susan Philipsz War Damaged Instruments installation shot

Susan Philipsz War Damaged Instruments installation shot

War Damaged Musical Instruments features fourteen recordings of British and German brass and wind instruments damaged in conflicts over the last 200 years.

The notes recorded are based on the tones of the military bugle call ‘The Last Post’, but the tune is fragmented to such an extent that it is almost unrecognisable. The tune signalled to lost and wounded soldiers that it was safe to return to base and is used today as a final farewell in military funerals and Remembrance ceremonies.

The artist has worked with the architecture of the space devising a sequence of sounds that travel the length of the Duveen galleries. Philipsz explains,

I am less interested in creating music than to see what sounds these instruments are still capable of, even if that sound is just the breath of the player as he or she exhales through the battered instrument. All the recordings have a strong human presence.

Forming part of the 14-18 NOW arts programme to commemorate the First World War centenary, the work features several instruments from that period, and has a special resonance with the history of Tate Britain, as part of the site was originally a military hospital that treated soldiers injured in the First World War.

It is also a poignant reminder that conflict and loss are present in the world today.

As uplifting as it is painful…her best work to date, 4 stars
The Guardian

  • Download the map of the speakers [PDF, 31 Kb]

Read the curatorial essay where Dr Linda Schädler reflects on how Susan Philipsz captures the feeling of mourning.

This exhibition has been curated by Sofia Karamani.

Tate Britain

Millbank
London SW1P 4RG
Plan your visit

Dates

21 November 2015 – 3 April 2016

14-18 NOW

14-18 NOW

Find out more

  • Paul Nash Equivalents for the Megaliths 1935 collection & © Tate

    Paul Nash

    Uncover the surreal and mystical side of English landscapes through one of the most distinctive British painters

  • BBC: The story of the Last Post

  • Review: The New York Times

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