Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Residency at Bundanon

Residency at Bundanon


In May 2012, Darragh and David undertook a residency at the Bundanon Trust. During the residency, Team D scoped the distinct elements of APHASIA and began collecting extensive recordings of text, whispers, declamations, breathing, heartbeats, along with more conventional musical timbres of percussion and piano.
Bundanon is a special place – a place that affords artists space and time to consider, reconsider, create, deconstruct, expand, concentrate and realise. For us, it was a time of uninterrupted creative flow, where Darragh worked on testing a range of materials, where David worked on sound design and music composition, and the wholistic experience of APHASIA was framed. 
    Darragh sketching at Bundanon
We would like to thank the Bundanon Trust for the great opportunity of being resident in the Musician’s Cottage. A creative space of peace, tranquility and no interruptions. http://www.bundanon.com.au/
Musician's Cottage at Bundanon
While there, we made the significant step of determining each of the discrete elements of APHASIA and established the conditions and meanings of their co-relation.  This will form the basis of subsequent blog entries as we explore the whole installation, then the process of making each discrete part.
    David's workstation at Bundanon
To the fantastic team at Bundanon – a heartfelt thank you; our residency was a game-changer in the way we had time to experiment and argue the finer points of the APHASIA: to create work, then pull it apart and start again, to build on creative successes and breakthroughs, and work through and reconsider creative failures – all such important aspects of conceptualising, making and doing.
One of the great highlights was the opportunity to record (and re-record) all of the text that we are using as raw material for APHASIA. This is powerful and highly personal and intimate material: letters written to Darragh by her father, and recollections of Darragh’s eclectic dreams. In bringing these two bodies of text together, there is a collision of meaning, of perspective, of function, and of reality that underscores the concept at the heart of APHASIA.
One of the most compelling dreams related by Darragh in APHASIA is reproduced here, along with her drawing of the dream…

I'm halfway up the bed on a mattress that is half see-through. There's a big rat underneath me. A white one. The bed is out in the garden, not far from the trampoline, beside the trees...














Rat under bed - a depiction of the dream by Darragh

Sunday, July 29, 2012

About Darragh O Callaghan

About Darragh O Callaghan


Darragh is a visual artist from Ireland. Through her work she employs many media such as photography, video, performance and more recently drawings.
On the surface the work, home is referenced - a place of security, warmth and stability. In the work, however, there is an ominous underbelly – a sense that all is not quite right; a contestation of gender, of politics, of geography. At the core, there is a sharp edge to the exploration of content that is inherently about family, love, trust – but the work cuts through the surface of normal relations to these such things and probes deeper into a more profound territory of underlying truth that is unsettling and provocative.
The body becomes a place of action through which identity is forged. Actions on the body begin a discourse on resilience and overcoming. The video works of immersion and submersion, emotional disintegration, and the durational performances of weight upon the body, at once define strength and fragility, adaptability, stoicism, vulnerability and destruction. The significance of the textural materials and their usage act as a vehicle to express her ideas.

Here is a showreel of Darragh's work:




Contents of showreel:

Surface Tension, still of video installation
Pink Cock Room, still of video performance
Jackhammered, video performance
If Only You Could See, video
Proximidad, C-type print
Brick performance, live performance
Brick performance, live performance
Brick performance, live performance
All That's Inbetween, live performance
Building up, screenprint of live performance
Concrete Feet, screen print
Focus Point, ink drawing
House Pour, screen print
Nimbus Vice 2, Lightjet C-type print
Nimbus Vice 1, Lightjet C-type print
Desiccated Vessel, C-type print


You can see much more of Darragh's work at www.darraghocallaghan.com

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

About David Sudmalis


About David Sudmalis 


David is a composer-performer living in Sydney, Australia.  His practice is varied, working across numerous music genres (classical, popular, jazz) and often in collaboration with visual artists.

His recent work has been characterised by an increasing use of composition outside of the audible spectrum – particularly below 20Hz (infrasound), where sound is felt rather than heard, and where there is a predisposition for involuntary physiological response to sound waves. Under proper conditions with specifically tuned infrasound, a spectator’s experience can range from extreme calm, sorrow, and stillness, to more acute responses including peripheral hallucination. David has been working in this area for around ten years and developed infrasonic composition as a counterpoint to audible composition…

On this page, there are some samples of David’s work to date: an audio-visual showreel, and excerpts from compositions. Neither have infrasonic elements embedded within, as these are best experienced under controlled conditions.








Details of composition excerpts:

0'00" Domino Theory (for solo clarinet), performed by Carl Rosman
0'34" The Joy of Loss (installation)
1'30" Cicada Dusk (for orchestra), performed by the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Marcus Stenz
2'25" Enki (for flute, live electronics and digital audio), performed by Daynor Missingham and David Sudmalis
3'29" Zillmanton Clarities (for orchestra), performed by the West Australian Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Kevin Field
4'29" Aphasia [preview] (installation)

As for David's other life, you can find out about that here: www.connectcp.org/DavidSudmalis

Monday, July 23, 2012

Welcome to APHASIA


Welcome to APHASIA


APHASIA is the new work by collaborating artists Darragh O Callaghan and David Sudmalis. It is an immersive installation bringing together our practices in photomedia, sculpture, sound, music and performance. APHASIA will premiere at the Australian Centre for Photography in December 2012, and we aim to tour it internationally throughout 2013.

Aphasia is from the Greek root ἀφᾰσία meaning speechlessness caused by fear or perplexity; in English, aphasia refers to a medical condition that presents as difficulties in language ability, occasioned by injury or disease to the brain. There is a great synopsis of the condition at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aphasia

For us, we are treating the notion of aphasia as indicative of the difficulties of communication: contested meaning, incomplete comprehension, and malleable memory.  For us both, it is a rich personal reservoir of experience upon which we are both drawing for this work.

APHASIA takes its point of departure letters written to Darragh and her own dreams.  In bringing these source materials together, we bring into dispute worlds of reality and fantasy, truths and obvious fictions, until these separate worlds merge and are indistinguishable from each other – a new entity with its own antecedents and consequents, and the inherent difficulties that such a conflation inevitably produces. 

This blog will trace the development of the work, ranging from our residency at Bundanon, through exhaustive materials testing, composition and the debate about performance, to realisation in December.

We are glad you’ve chosen to join us on this creative journey, and look forward to seeing you at APHASIA either in Sydney or elsewhere…

D&D