Eye music
is a term taken from the title of an exhibition of that name a few years ago. The image
(above) of a love song by Baude Cordier, was included in that exhibition.
Cordier was a Renaissance song writer, the image forming this love chanson 'Belle,
bonne, sage' constructed in a heart shape, with red notes
to indicate rhythmic change. This is a very basic idea, touching on some aspects of Islamic calligraphy and relates to Appolinaire's visual poetry. (Below)
However interesting as these overlaps between drawing and writing may be, there is another very
close relationship between drawing and sound that I would like to open out. You could think of musical or sound notation as a form of drawing. Just as a map is a drawing that enables us to
‘read’ a landscape and travel around a country, a musical score allows us to
play and engage with music. This relationship is a very old one. The first musical
representations using images based on all ten fingers and thumbs to illustrate
how the sounds could be represented visually.
My own feeling is that as new technologies become more central to the
way we make drawings, animation, sound tracks, visual scores and the return of
Chinese scroll type drawings will all begin to merge. We will naturally step
between old and new technologies and the divide between the arts will begin to
disappear. Sound is not the only area to have its own visual language. Dancers have developed a familiarity with visual notation as well. Chorographic notation, such as Laban, now becoming almost as familiar as the
visual score and you can image it being in the future linked into timelines that will sit alongside scrolling
images. The familiar layout of editing
software such as ‘Final Cut’ or ‘Premiere’
already points towards some form of future visual synthesis of these things.
Basic Laban Notation
Adverbial Laban i.e. actions with annotations as to their quality
The visual abstract pattern of sound being edited
However it is also useful
to think about how each of these elements can drive quite separate ideas.
Drawing from the moving figure is a very challenging activity and often can
result in a mess of lose mark-making. However when you try and compress the
information down and combine this with some form of structured annotation, such
as Laban, perhaps new structures will arrive. The moment of Cubism could be
seen as a first attempt to compress visual movements into compact wholes,
Futurism then opening these out into more rhythmic structures. Neither movement
however went on to fully synthesise their findings, probably because of the
fast rise of the camera as a recording tool and the pioneering work of Eadweard Muybridge. I’ve no answer to this, simply a gut feeling
that there is still much work that could be done in this area by someone
wanting to invest time and energy on something that is fundamental to an
understanding of life.
Above, a Braque drawing, demonstrating how time can be compressed by building a construction based on several viewpoints at once. In his case the observer's movements are frozen within a record of perceptions.
Duchamp's 'Nude Descending a staircase' (above) attempts to both capture the movement of a figure as well as embed within this some awareness of the observer's interaction with the event.
Balla's drawing starts to work in a territory between that of the new information coming from photographs and a sort of stylised notation of movement.
Muybridge
Time lapse photography
Just as drawing has a lot to offer to the exploration of movement, it can also be used to establish a relationship between sound and image. Several early 20th
Century artists such as Kandinsky believed that there was a direct relationship
between sound and image. A particular note could it was believed be represented
by a certain colour or shape. There was a rise in interest in synesthesia and
as more and more information was gathered about how the brain worked, we began
to realise that our senses are wired up in such a way that what we read as
sensations are in fact products of an interpretative process that can at times
become mixed up. A really interesting
read that touches on this issue is The Mind of a Mnemonist by Luria, a fascinating
book that introduces us to the problems that can occur when senses are ‘wired
up’ differently.
Of course many early 20th
Century artists were also influenced by the writings of Madam Blavatsky, in
particular the Theosophical ‘Law of correspondences’; adherents seeking some sort of shared essence of ideas, as a way of being able to
develop generalprinciples from
particular events. Abstraction at that time
for many artists, such as Mondrian, pointed to the existence of a reality
higher than the merely material. Therefore a correspondence between colour,
shape and music, seemed to them to be a higher order of reality, a synthetic
vision that transcended everyday perceptions. For more information download Colour shape and music: Thought forms in abstract art. This an academic text that introduces the ideas behind Theosophy and how they relate to the art of the time.
Over time there have been various approaches to the production of what is sometimes called 'eye music'. The experimental work of the pianist Mary Hallock Greenwalt being of particular interest.
Patent for a colour organ
Mary Hallock Greenwalt
Hallock-Greenwalt's art form of coloured sound was called 'Nourathar', a name adapted from the Arabic words for light (nour), and essence of (athar). Her earliest attempts at creating this art entailed her construction of an automated machine where coloured lights were synchronised to records. This produced an unsatisfactory result, leading to her development of an instrument that could actually be played live. She did not produce a strict definition of correspondence between specific colours and particular notes, instead arguing that these relationships were inherently variable and reflected the temperament and ability of the performer. She also produced the earliest abstract hand made films known to still exist. These were films produced specifically to be performed by her earliest version of the colour organ which was a machine for automatic accompaniment to records. Its construction, where a single viewer looked down into the machine at the film itself, resembled Edison's kinetoscope.
Another early pioneer of visualised sound was A Wallace Rimington whose colour organ was both built and used during the early years of the twentieth century. In his book Colour music : the art of mobile colour, published in 1912, Rimington described the internal workings of the instrument: a powerful white light was produced from an arc-light of 13,000 candlepower which passed through two bisulphide of carbon prisms providing a colour spectrum. These colours were then mixed and projected onto a screen via diaphragms under the control of the operator using a keyboard and pedals. He took out a patent in 1894, but unlike Hallock Greenwalt's colour organ his was mute and the operator had to play the colours whilst accompanying an orchestra.
A Wallace Rimington's colour organ
Probably the most well known version of these ideas was the clavier à lumières or "keyboard with lights", or tastiera per luce, as it appears in Scriabin's score for Prometheus: Poem of Fire. The clavier à lumières was an instrument invented by Alexander Scriabin for use in his 1915 composition; the keyboard, had it's notes corresponding to colours as given by Scriabin's synesthetic system. All of which was as specified in his score for Prometheus: Poem of Fire.
Scriabin assigned colours to notes and the associated keys were colour mapped.
For those of you
interested in developing drawing machines, you could explore harmonic motion using home made pendulums.
Using sand pendulums to explore harmonic motion
Although I seem to
have wondered somewhat off track, I think you can see where this diversion
could take you. However, going back to sound scores within contemporary art
practice, you could look at the work of Caroline Bergvall, an artist I’m
particularly interested in because she looks back at old narrative forms, such
as Norse Sagas and has developed a practice using her voice to draw with. See and hear her work here. Radio 4 has a very interesting programme on artists and music here.
Finally those of you who are into Flash animation might be interested in blending abstract representation with animation.
My last post about the Leeds City Art Gallery reminded me of one small exhibition from Gallery 4 that was of
great significance for old art educators such as myself. It has just closed. but if you didn't see it you can always check out the original book.
‘Growth
and form’ was published in 1917, it was an investigation of mathematical scale, order and process in relation to organic growth and tried to establish why forms become
the type of forms they were. It was hugely influential and up until the late
1970s was essential readingfor all art
and design Foundation students. (In the case of most students like myself this
meant looking at the pictures)Artists
from Richard Hamilton to Gego (see post on Gego) were deeply influenced by his
theories, as they added scientific weight to the poetry of formal
investigation. The book is available here:
Illustration from D'Arcy's 'On Growth and Form'
One
of the most powerful tools that artists and designers took from D’Arcy was the
proportional grid. This allowed you to distort any form into another and yet
preserve a formal link back to the original. It was logical and unpredictable
at the same time, all you had to do was overlay one form with a regular grid
and then as long as there were the same number of squares, produce any
distorted grid by squashing or opening out distances between co-ordinates and
then copy what was in each corresponding numbered reference onto the new
distorted grid. You could produce endless variations of form and yet they all
looked purposeful, because there was always a logical system laying underneath
each drawing.
A typical exercise in changing the dynamic of a set of regular squares.
You can use grids to change the characteristics of any image.
D'Arcy Thompson's
transformation grids aimed to show how a simple mathematical operation could
turn a parrotfish (top left) into an angelfish (top right), in doing so he was also able to identify the essential relationships between forms that had a similar evolutionary history.
Perhaps these grids are so familiar to artists because Thompson took the idea from an artist in the first place. Durer had long ago realised the importance of grids when investigating form. They were essential when trying to draw objectively (see drawing of drawing from below) and when developing perspectives and if all the elements in an image were to fit together logically Durer further realised that similar mathematical principles were required to inform all the elements in his work.
Durer gridded heads
The moral is, never dismiss artists from the past, they are always worth revisiting and they can become a rich resource that can re-energise your ideas over and over again.
Leonardo: Perspective drawing
If you want to locate objects in space, the classic method is to produce a perspective first, this perspective can also be seen as a distorted grid, once seen in this way you can 'people' this grid with whatever you are working with and establish a 'reality' or conviction that can support your idea's visualisation.