A quick post to let you know about the really REALLY nice book i received the other day. I can’t stop playing with it. The publication celebrates Staalplaat Soundsystem‘s brilliant work.
Yokomono. Photo Staalplaat
Sale Away, Nantes, 2014. Photo Staalplaat
Yokomono White at _V2. Photo Staalplaat
Composed Nature, Neerpelt. Photo Staalplaat
You probably know them already. Geert-Jan Hobijn started Staalplaat as a record label in the 1980s. He then expanded his label with a radio programme, a record shop, a magazine and, around the year 2000, he founded Staalplaat Soundsystem, the artistic branch of Staalplaat. I’ve always been a big fan of their noise-making machines and performances that use all kinds of toys, tools, natural or urban settings and electronic junk. Think car horn concert, compositions for vacuum cleaners or washing machines, machines for the ‘spirit of dead computers‘, toy cars driving over vinyl grooves, etc.
The book/turntable/music gadget was published after Hobijn won the Witteveen+Bos Art+Technology Award which goes every year to a visual artist whose work unites the disciplines of art and technology in an exceptional manner and for whom engineering is far more than a means to an end.
Photo Staalplaat
In typical Staalplaat fashion, the publication only serves as a pretext for letting people have fun with sound. It comes with a nifty paper turntable, a music instrument you activate by plugging in a small battery and i even got a pencil to play with the turntable. There’s also a book, by the way.
Staalplaat Soundsytem, Om, 2014. Photo Staalplaat Soundsystem
Staalplaat Soundsytem, Om, 2014. Photo Staalplaat Soundsystem
Geert-Jan Hobijn, Composed Nature, part of the exhibition Om, 2014. Video Witteveen+Bos
Zephyrus Composed Nature, part of the exhibition Om, Deventer, 2014
The publication and the Art+Technology Award were accompanied by an exhibition featuring an indoor version of Staalplaat’s Composed Nature inside the Bergkerk Church as part of the exhibition ‘Om’.
Seventy trees were placed in the centre of the church. Visitors of the show could dial a phone number and select one of three compositions. Vintage kitchen mixers attached to the tree trunks were then activated and made the tree rustle according to the chosen composition.
You can order a copy either at Staalplaat or at Metamkine.
Photo on the homepage: AV festival.