03/08/15
Interview with Eloise Hawser
Eloise Hawser: Lives on Wire
ICA Lower Gallery, London
1 July – 6 September 2015
1 July – 6 September 2015
The light in the ICA’s lower gallery
changes colour slowly, switching through a deliciously dilute RGB spectrum; the
gentle buzzing hum in the background offers a white noise that could lull one
to sleep. In the centre of the room stands a curious contraption: a
colour-changer taken from the cinema organ once found at the Stockport Regal. Capable
of conflating a spectacle of music and light, cinema organs were developed by
the British telephone engineer, Robert Hope-Jones, in the early 20th century,
to replace the orchestras that had previously accompanied silent movies. Placed
behind often quite ornate art deco-style illuminated glass outer shells –
somewhat like a jukebox in appearance – these organs could be played remotely
via a pneumatic system, albeit sometimes with a slight time lapse between the
organist’s command and the resulting sound.
The colour-changing mechanism is a
complex contraption, comprising cams, arms and a spring box or variable
resistor. Originally, this would have been connected to a set of filament light
bulbs but, here at the ICA, it is fed through an analogue to DCX convertor
in the ceiling, which makes the LED lights in the gallery change colour.
Accompanying the mechanism are a
couple of films – one showing the cinema organ that remains behind the scenes
in Burberry’s flagship store on Regent Street – a former cinema – and an
installation of BT cables, expanding the theme of wires and incipient obsolescence.
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