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Cascadence

600 Townsend Building
San Francisco, CA 2002

Funded by an Individual Artist Commission Grant from the San Francisco Arts Commission Cultural Equity Grants Program.

Common kitchen implements were the key components used to conduct water in this installation of moving sound sculptures. The public was invited to play the sculptures: slap a clapping pool, tip rocking colanders, and raise a teakettle fountain to create their own combinations.

The exhibition culminated in a performance created in collaboration with composer and musician Chus Alonso, and musicians Fran Holland, Yari Mander, Darren Morgan and Brian Rice. Chus refined the complex instrumentation for the Cascadence score, structured according to the cycles of water: runoff, rain, creek, waterfall, river, delta mouth, ocean, evaporation, cloud, and storm.

Colander see saw, see caption below
Judith, Yari, and Darren perform on the Colander See Saw.
Pool: 10′ L x 5′ W x 2′ D.
Colanders were attached to a pair of 7 foot “ladders.” Mounted over an oval pool of water, the structure was rocked back and forth by hand. Water rained from the colanders in unison with varied ranges of force and staggered conclusions.

One of the project’s merits that influenced its funding by the San Francisco Arts Commission Cultural Equity Grants Program was it’s potential for reaching a new audience for art. The work was presented in the courtyard of an office building in the South of Market district where building tenants could access freely during weekdays. Two Sound Sculpture Family Play Days were open to the public on the weekend.

Because my work playfully recombines the familiar into new relationships, it appeals to the everyday person. Because my work is site specific, it reaches a varied audience dependent on location. Arts venues attract mostly artists and art lovers, office buildings attract a variety of workers and the passing public, university venues attract students, faculty and staff, etc. My work is more likely to draw a casual, spontaneous audience who has a relationship with or reason to be at a particular venue.

Signage invited the public to interact with the sculptures and depending on their point of view, play them as instruments or toys. In this spatial context, my intention was for visitors to enjoy these explorations while making an elemental connection with the properties of sound and water.

Clapping Pool

A receptacle for bringing low tech water “instruments” to life. The instruments consisted of containers and objects that together created an infinite range of sounds.

Sound was created by striking floating elements such as upside down bowls, bundt pans and gourds, blowing through tubes and manipulating hollow objects such as 5-gallon plastic water bottle spouts or a tuna can attached to a stick.

The objects were partially immersed in water or modified by moving them in and out of the water.

clapping pool during the performance
Chus blows through a tube to create bubbling sounds.

playing the tops of water bottles
Judith and Darren manipulate 5-gallon water bottle spouts by moving them up and down
hands slap the water's surface like a drum
Darren gets wet playing the clapping pool.

Performers slap the pool like bongos
Left to right: Chus Alonso, Darren Morgan, Yari Mander, and Brian Rice in performance.

audience members after the performance
Audience members strike floating gourds with mallets made with sticks and rubber bands and other materials
clapping pool sitting with still water

visitors play with tubes and floating bowls
Family day: mom demonstrates blowing through the big tube with her toddler alongside upside down metal bowls.
Judith demonstrates the colander see-saw

Colander See Saw

A pair of ladder-like structures sporting two rows of small to very large colanders.

Mounted over an oval pool of water, the structure is rocked back and forth by hand. Water rains from the colanders in unison with varied ranges of force and staggered conclusions.

water pours from a large colander
A variety of shower sounds are made by rocking the colander seesaw.

performers operate the seesaw in front of an audience
Performance view of seesaw (foreground) and tea kettle fountain (right)
grandfather and toddler with seesaw
Family day: grandfather and grandson play with the showering seesaw

Tea Kettle Fountain

Four tea kettle clusters, suspended from a metal structure that is raised and lowered into four enormous plastic water “buckets” by cranking a winch. The objects also served as percussion instruments.

The Ocean segment of the performance involved dipping and dumping buckets of water into the tubs.

tea kettle clusters lowered into the water
Four tea kettle clusters are suspended from a metal structure that can be raised and lowered into four enormous plastic water “buckets” by cranking a winch
tea kettles raised above four large water buckets
In hindsight, the tea kettles best sound value was percussive – striking them with mallets
Judith holds metal bucket ready to pour
Judith gets ready to pour water back into the huge plastic tub during the Ocean segment of the performance
Brian pours water from a metal bucket
Brian pours water back into the huge plastic tub during the Ocean segment

Family Days

Two Sound Sculpture Family Play Days were open to the public.

All ages were welcome. Newspaper ads encouraged people to bring everyday objects that could get wet, plus water-resistant clothing.

Dad blows through a tube making a big splash for mom and toddler
performers rehearse the metal water tubs sitting on top of metal garbage cans
Left to right: Yari Mander, Fran Holland, and Chus Alonso

Rehearsals

Once the installation was in place in early March, musicians were able to fully try out the instruments in water for the first time.

closeup of hands playing the clapping pool
Water was too cold at times to slap their hands on the clapping pool’s surface.
Darren flips a large plastic sheet to make sound
Performance segment “La Tormenta – The Storm” included large sheets of plastic and whirring plastic tubes
audience's view of the performers up front
Chus plays his flute while performers play percussion at the performance’s conclusion
Bird's eye view of the installation