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Online e-dition July 31, 2013


That business with the art…

Dan MacKinlay, Sonar Festival of Advanced Music and New Media Art, Barcelona


Davide Quayola, Matter, Sónar 2013 Davide Quayola, Matter, Sónar 2013
photo Consuelo Bautista
Sónar forced me, for the sake of integrity, to smuggle Cointreau in my underpants. But I'll get to my rationalisation for that in a moment. First, let me tell you about some genuinely lovely things that were presented in Barcelona as part of Sónar this year.

I've not seen anything more grandly presented than Davide Quayola's Matter, as viewed at sunset. I ascended to the marvelously overstated domes of Catalunya National Museum of Art via four flights of Olympic-grade stairs, past the Font Màgica and sculpted formal gardens. I was then ushered past curtained and closed galleries into a colossal, tiered, domed and nearly empty hall where a 12-metre projection screen hung with a Rodin bronze in front. Name notwithstanding, Matter is an essay in pure form: the subject is a digital recomposition of Rodin's Thinker, skewed by staccato glitches and mutations, stripped back to skeletal polygons. A soundtrack of similarly glitched harmonies by Matthias Kispert invites quiet contemplation of this digital excoriation of form. What is the minimal number of bits needed to evoke the classic Rodin work? It's not far from that fashionable lo-fi video mangling technique "datamoshing," but this one is strictly for the Blu-ray set. With this much build-up for a work, nothing but a 12-metre screen will do. I mean, eleven-and-a-half won't cut it when there are two separate thronging break-dancing competitions outside. In scale and contrast alone, this simple work has a mammoth effect.

Jacob Kierkegaard, Labyrinthitis, Sónar 2013 Jacob Kierkegaard, Labyrinthitis, Sónar 2013
courtesy CosmoCaixa
In contraposition, presented subtly to the point of subliminality, Jacob Kierkegaard's auditory installation lurks amongst the chaos of CosmoCaixa, the children's science museum. A visual pun on the cochlear shape of the museum's central ramp, Labyrinthitis is made of nothing but speakers. Each plays intra-aurally recorded "Tartini tones"—pure tones eliciting illusory psychoacoustic ghost tones. The concept is neat, a confusing blurring of reality at the edges of perception as you walk through the stylised inner ear. Then you emerge into the museum's trilobite display and that piece is over.

For both these offsite Sónar works a highlight is their apposite placement amid this extravagant and personable city. But even Barcelona has bleak concrete sheds to wall out the cityscape for banal corporate events and the like, and this leads me to Sónar's onsite art, which is where things fall apart.

First of all, there's not much of it. Despite a floor crammed with notionally-creative-technology companies' newest product demonstrations, there is not much actual, well, art; certainly not "art" in the sense that one might go to a festival to experience—say, stuff that didn't come out as a smartphone app for $0.99 last year.

Sónar 2013 Streaming DJs  APP Sónar 2013 Streaming DJs APP
Take the much-press-released Skrillex Variations by Robert Sakrowski, which is a YouTube playlist of cover versions of Skrillex's song "Scary Monsters & Nice Sprites." The text for the piece claims that it "reflects on the paradigm shift in consumerism through YouTube, where artist fans (sic) no longer behave as mere spectators or consumers but are rather actively involved in transforming the methods and material of their idols." It's a brave fool who examines consumer interaction by framing a passive YouTube mashup thus, in this venue. Whatever else I might say about them, the main things these market stallholders are selling are tools to actually interact with and remix the hell out of media and the Skrillex Variations looks especially perfunctory by comparison.

But there is an even less flattering comparison, just down the metro line, and definitely not part of Sónar: the large and top notch video-art exhibition This is not a love song at the La Virreina Image Centre, showcasing more permutations and perversions of the music video than are dreamt of here, in a thoughtful and lovingly curated show with a minute fraction of the budget of the festival. To drive the knife home: it's free admission.

Let's talk about this inward-looking tendency at Sónar in light of its obtrusively interesting surroundings. This is a country rocked by unrest. There is a 57% youth unemployment rate and rolling corruption scandals in a region with an upcoming secession referendum. Oh and by the way there are still aftershocks from Europe's freshest and longest dictatorship and yet the festival is politics-free. Then, in a city whose unique tapestry is threaded with architectural innovation old and new, Sónar opts for generic exhibition halls.

Outside are street protests, scandal, corruption, anti-capitalism, fascist revivalism, catholic fundamentalism. Outside there are cathedrals, boulevards and buskers, beer-drinking families watching skate-offs, grandmothers toasting the sunset in pleated skirts and a skyline marked by an intergenerational cadre of revolutionary architects. Inside, there are concrete walls and the eternal bar queue, and this most idiosyncratic of cities is made as bland as an airport lounge. There is nothing to startle the privileged customer base out of their global party with the hint of local flavour. I'm not demanding all my art be 'site-specific' but to turn such a fertile site into something so sterile is plain perverse.

But fine, we can ignore the suggestive locale in favour of bringing the best the world has to offer, thanks to the global reach and brand-power of this renowned festival. Right? Except Sónar's curatorial hand, it seems, has been supplanted by UK video producer Adam Smith's invisible hand. This is one of the most outrageously successful festivals on the planet to have "new media art" in its name. One hundred and twenty one thousand punters passed into the maw of this monster, putting its budget somewhere in the double-digit millions before sponsorship. Yet the content of the actual new media art program in no way reflects that. The echoing conference halls that Sónar has occupied are mostly filled with banners from the booze sponsor and for-cash booths for various start-up companies offering modestly interesting software for driving techno with your iPad.

Missing: commissions, experiments, thrills. There are some promising student semester works from the local university. There are some momentary events here and there like the laptop jam in a mostly-unused cinema. That's it, really. Mostly, the few works are okay, but the curation is… well… It is as if, a week before raising the curtain, someone noticed the words on the flyer, and decided it would be cheaper to commission a half-dozen unrelated works to tick that box than to reprint the promo material. You know, as long as it doesn't get in the way of the festival-run-monopoly beer-tent. And by the way, please pat-search everyone at the gate while checking their two hundred euro tickets. And THAT is why, even as the gate security drain one friend's water bottle and confiscate another's contraband apple at the gate, I skive in on a press pass with my trousers stuffed with illicit citrus liqueur.

But enough. This is sufficient bile, or nearly so. For though the program is perfunctory as compared with the hype, there are one or two events on the closing night that are worth mentioning. For one, who can fail to love Max Richter's reboot of the Vivaldi franchise, performed live? Four Seasons recomposed has no enemies. As lounge-room-loveable as the original but so much more hip; seeing it with real live violins right there really takes the sting out of the Naxos guilt.

Lorenzo Senni, ORACLE, Sónar 2013 Lorenzo Senni, ORACLE, Sónar 2013
Photo Oscar Garcia
Directly after, in the contemporary art museum and former Sónar venue MACBA, producer Lorenzo Senni performs ORACLE, slicing up fragments of rave music samples into arpeggiated Reichian loops. But wait, here's the grabber: this guy has a colour laser and a smoke machine. Oh, alright, I could be fairer to the artist than that trite statement, because the effect is impressive. In the museum, the elongated lasers carve the imposing volume of the atrium into a kind of luminous architecture. In this context, though, it's not the most propitious choice for a closing act. Senni has taken a vibrant, politicised artistic form, abstracted it and removed its context and content in favour of pure structure. It's soothing, of course. But if it's a Sónar commission, I recommend they reconsider their brief, because the analogy it presents with their current state is unfortunate. The endless, charming, pointedly vacuous ornamentation mirrors the overall curatorial direction of Sónar itself: pretty, safe, emptied of message.


Sónar, 20th International Festival of Advanced Music and New Media Art, Barcelona, 12-16 June 2013; http://www.sonar.es/en/2013/

This is not a love song, curator F. Javier Panera, La Virreina Centre De la Image, 22 May- 29 September 2013; http://lavirreina.bcn.cat/en/exhibitions/not-love-song

RealTime issue #115 June-July 2013 pg. web

© Dan MacKinlay; for permission to reproduce apply to [email protected]

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