FORGET AMNESIA
curated by Haroon Mirza and Milovan Farronato
Serpentine Gallery
Kensington Gardens - London
Friday 22th August 2014 at 8 pm
Artists Haroon Mirza, Mark Fell and Okkyung Lee come together for an evening of light and sound synthesis, affecting the Pavilion's acoustic and spatial environment. This Park Nights performance is programmed in collaboration with Fiorucci Art Trust on the occasion of the Trust's festival Forget Amnesia in Stromboli, Italy, curated by Mirza and Milovan Farronato.
Haroon Mirza (born 1977, London) is a British artist. Mirza combines a variety of readymade and time-based material to create audio compositions, which are often realised as site-specific installations. In doing so, Mirza complicates the distinctions between noise, sound and music, and alters the function and meaning of everyday objects and socio-cultural constructs. Recent solo shows include Random Access Recall at Le Grande Café, Centre d'Art Contemporain, France, Are Jee Be? at the Irish Museum of Modern Art and The Light Hours at Le Corbusier’s Villa Savoye, France. In May 2014, Mirza is performing a new work in collaboration with composer Shiva and the London Sinfonietta orchestra as part of the Blue Touch Paper programme and will also have works included in group shows including Art or Sound, Prada Foundation, Italy, amongst others.
Mark Fell is a multidisciplinary artist based in Sheffield. Fell is widely known for combining popular music styles, such as electronica and techno, with more academic approaches to computer-based composition with a particular emphasis on algorithmic and mathematical systems. As well as recorded works, Fell produces installation pieces, often using multiple speaker systems. The diversity of Fell’s practice is reflected in the range of international institutions that present his work – from super-clubs such as Berghain (Berlin), to the Hong Kong National Film archive. Fell has received commissions from institutions including Thyssen-Bornemisza Art Contemporary. In addition to his creative practice Fell is a curator of experimental electronic music and has been involved in a number of academic research projects ranging from computer science to musicology.
A native of Korea, Okkyung Lee has been developing her own voice in contemporary cello performance, improvisation and composition for more than a decade by blending her wide interests and influences. Since moving to New York in 2000, she has released more than 20 albums including a solo record, Ghil, on Editions Mego/Ideologic Organ, Noisy Love Songs (for George Dyer) on Tzadik and toured extensively in the United States and Europe. Okkyung’s versatility has led her to collaborate with numerous artists such as Laurie Anderson, David Behrman, Douglas Gordon, Vijay Iyer, Christian Marclay, Thurston Moore, Ikue Mori, Marina Rosenfeld, Jim O’Rourke, Evan Parker and John Zorn among others. In 2010, she was the recipient of Foundation For Contemporary Arts Grant in Music/Sound.
Between June and October 2014, Serpentine Galleries present Park Nights, an annual series of live art, poetry, music, film, literature, performance and theory. This summer, eight events have been conceived to take place on selected Friday evenings in the unique environment of the Serpentine Pavilion 2014, designed by Chilean architect Smiljan Radić.
Image: Mark Fell, Self and Now, 2013
curated by Haroon Mirza and Milovan Farronato
Serpentine Gallery
Kensington Gardens - London
Friday 22th August 2014 at 8 pm
Artists Haroon Mirza, Mark Fell and Okkyung Lee come together for an evening of light and sound synthesis, affecting the Pavilion's acoustic and spatial environment. This Park Nights performance is programmed in collaboration with Fiorucci Art Trust on the occasion of the Trust's festival Forget Amnesia in Stromboli, Italy, curated by Mirza and Milovan Farronato.
Haroon Mirza (born 1977, London) is a British artist. Mirza combines a variety of readymade and time-based material to create audio compositions, which are often realised as site-specific installations. In doing so, Mirza complicates the distinctions between noise, sound and music, and alters the function and meaning of everyday objects and socio-cultural constructs. Recent solo shows include Random Access Recall at Le Grande Café, Centre d'Art Contemporain, France, Are Jee Be? at the Irish Museum of Modern Art and The Light Hours at Le Corbusier’s Villa Savoye, France. In May 2014, Mirza is performing a new work in collaboration with composer Shiva and the London Sinfonietta orchestra as part of the Blue Touch Paper programme and will also have works included in group shows including Art or Sound, Prada Foundation, Italy, amongst others.
Mark Fell is a multidisciplinary artist based in Sheffield. Fell is widely known for combining popular music styles, such as electronica and techno, with more academic approaches to computer-based composition with a particular emphasis on algorithmic and mathematical systems. As well as recorded works, Fell produces installation pieces, often using multiple speaker systems. The diversity of Fell’s practice is reflected in the range of international institutions that present his work – from super-clubs such as Berghain (Berlin), to the Hong Kong National Film archive. Fell has received commissions from institutions including Thyssen-Bornemisza Art Contemporary. In addition to his creative practice Fell is a curator of experimental electronic music and has been involved in a number of academic research projects ranging from computer science to musicology.
A native of Korea, Okkyung Lee has been developing her own voice in contemporary cello performance, improvisation and composition for more than a decade by blending her wide interests and influences. Since moving to New York in 2000, she has released more than 20 albums including a solo record, Ghil, on Editions Mego/Ideologic Organ, Noisy Love Songs (for George Dyer) on Tzadik and toured extensively in the United States and Europe. Okkyung’s versatility has led her to collaborate with numerous artists such as Laurie Anderson, David Behrman, Douglas Gordon, Vijay Iyer, Christian Marclay, Thurston Moore, Ikue Mori, Marina Rosenfeld, Jim O’Rourke, Evan Parker and John Zorn among others. In 2010, she was the recipient of Foundation For Contemporary Arts Grant in Music/Sound.
Between June and October 2014, Serpentine Galleries present Park Nights, an annual series of live art, poetry, music, film, literature, performance and theory. This summer, eight events have been conceived to take place on selected Friday evenings in the unique environment of the Serpentine Pavilion 2014, designed by Chilean architect Smiljan Radić.
Image: Mark Fell, Self and Now, 2013