5 Pages. 46” X 32”; 116.8 X 81.3 cm
Ink, Molten Gel, Acrylic, Tarte Maracuja Oil, Cold Spray Coating, Oil on Fujifilm Crystal Archive Supreme
Edition of 5 with 1 AP
The next word on new music.
5 Pages. 46” X 32”; 116.8 X 81.3 cm
Ink, Molten Gel, Acrylic, Tarte Maracuja Oil, Cold Spray Coating, Oil on Fujifilm Crystal Archive Supreme
Edition of 5 with 1 AP
In the score of "Orgone Dossier" for Soprano Voice, I confront the unconscious textuality of musical notation, a discourse that resists the simplistic transparency of language and transcends its conventional bounds. The composition, steeped in the neologistic structuralism akin to a global pharmacopeia, challenges standard interpretations and demands a reconsideration of the signifier and signified within musical contexts.
"Orgone Dossier" thus becomes a site where the real intrudes upon the symbolic; the score does not serve as a mere repository of musical instructions but as a field of jouissance, where enjoyment is intertwined with a certain terror of what lies beyond the decipherable. The soprano’s voice, tasked with navigating this landscape, encounters a lexicon that oscillates between meaning and absurdity, demanding a surrender to the unknown aspects of the text.
The structuralist approach, often rigid in its linguistic determinations, is subverted here through the introduction of terms from the pharmacopeial vocabulary that resist conventional semantic assignments. These terms, embedded within the score, act as points de capiton yet they simultaneously dislocate meaning. The score thus serves as a mirror reflecting the fragmented self back to the performer, inviting a confrontation with the internal otherness that is the unconscious.
Through "Orgone Dossier," we are invited to witness the unfolding of the voice as it engages with a text that is always incomplete, always producing new meaning through its gaps and voids. This engagement is not merely an act of performance but an act of interpretation that reveals the subject’s desire. A the desire to make the unintelligible intelligible, to find harmony in dissonance, and ultimately, to confront the core of one’s artistic being.
In this light, the score of "Orgone Dossier" represents a liminal space where the known and the unknown meet, where the voice seeks to articulate what is fundamentally inarticulable. It stands as a testament to the Lacanian assertion that the most profound truths lie where words fail, and it is here, in this failure, that true artistry begins.
The score further defines itself through the use of a dissimilar combination of spatial references, which serve to produce displacements within the musical narrative. These displacements are not random but are carefully calculated to yield the perspective information necessary for performance calibration. By manipulating spatial references, I created a sonic landscape that is constantly shifting, compelling the performers to adapt their interpretive strategies in real-time. This dynamic interplay between spatiality and sound adds an additional layer of complexity to the piece, challenging performers to recalibrate their approaches continuously.
The performers must embrace the recognition of the mutability of substances as a driving force behind the score's structure. This mutability is not merely a metaphorical concept but a tangible element that influences both the creation and execution of the piece. Just as substances change state in response to external conditions, so too does the musical material of this composition respond to the interpretive decisions of the performers. The initial composition, while providing a framework for the piece, is only one component of its ultimate realization. The true essence of the work emerges in the interplay between the written score and the performers' interpretation, a dynamic process that gives life to the music in real-time.
