Thursday, July 16, 2009
"Unravelling Bolero"--the art of Anne Adams
Unravelling Bolero, 1994--a bar-by-bar representation of Ravel's Bolero
Anne Adams was a Canadian biologist-turned-artist who died in 2007. Her best-known piece, the "Bolero" above, I think fits well into our recent discussion of visual representations of graphic rhythms. It seems that her interest in this approach may actually have been awakened by the early stages of the brain disease that ultimately killed her. Here is how her case is described in New Scientist:
When Adams completed Unravelling Boléro in 1994, her brain was starting to be affected by a neurodegenerative condition called primary progressive aphasia. It later robbed Adams of speech, and eventually took her life.
In its early stages, however, the condition seemed to unleash a flowering of neural development in a brain area that integrated information from different senses. In part, Unravelling Boléro may be a beautiful symptom of a terrible disease.
Here is how Unravelling Bolero is described in a piece in The New York Times:
Dr. Adams, who was also drawn to themes of repetition, painted one upright rectangular figure for each bar of “Bolero.” The figures are arranged in an orderly manner like the music, countered by a zigzag winding scheme, Dr. Miller said. The transformation of sound to visual form is clear and structured. Height corresponds to volume, shape to note quality and color to pitch. The colors remain unified until the surprise key change in bar 326 that is marked with a run of orange and pink figures that herald the conclusion.
Here's one more piece by her:
Migraine, 1998
Apparently, according to these articles, Ravel himself suffered of the same disease.
More information, and a gallery of more works, here.
wow, that's pretty heavy w/ the aphasia,
ReplyDeleteyet out of dire circumstances comes artful
speech...according to Timothy Leary's model of
concsciousness, most humans have their final
"peak experience" upon first sexual experience,
usually another "peak experience" will not occur
unless thru heavy drug use or a traumatic experience, just makes me think, i believe it's
possible to induce a "peak experience" via
prolonged cognitive creative challenges etc,
...wait, i dunno what i'm talkin' bout...
...i've always been fascinated by horror vacui, maybe 'cause i got traces of it
myself...but for someone clinically diagnosed
w/ it, artful abundance abounds, most noticeable
off the top of my head is Nick Blinko, leadsinger
for Rudimentary Peni, he's got some seriously
amazing artworks...
...also, brings to mind outsider artists, esp.
to me, Frank Jones & his "devilhouses", in fact,
his devilhouses could qualify as abstract comics,
not much of his work online tho...regardless,
i totally identify w/ him, his whole procedure
seems near to my own...
...the entire corpus of the Art Brut thing
fascinates on so many levels, most strikingly
in many cases is the otherworldly originality,
then i guess the obsession... i was very lucky
that the ABCD: A Collection of Art Brut made
a stop in Atlanta & i was able to see it,
it's always different to experience art in the
flesh & that showing just blow'd my babybrains out, incredible stuff...
...markmaking,
it's wild to think of our large moon,
how it allows our 23° stability, the
stats involved w/ planetary collision,
how Orpheus collided w/ Earth but hit
sideswipe, gifting us our glorious moon,
it's only life afterall,
& life only.
Beautiful amazing work. I heard her story on Radiolab podcast and had to see for myself. RIP, Anne.
ReplyDeleteAnyone know if Unravelling Bolero has been made available for purchase as print?
ReplyDeleteI have no idea. They should.
ReplyDelete