• 05:27 No definition for sound art
  • 07:31 Working with space
  • 08:34 Bergen, theater and ska
  • 12:46 Weaving with a 4-track recorder
  • 15:03 The tuner
  • 17:17 Broadcast and signal as time capsules
  • 19:37 Time pips and other endangered species
  • 20:56 'Radio Taxi Buenos Aires'
  • 26:49 The poetry of interference
  • 30:44 Deutsche Welle and the history of broadcasting
  • 33:21 'Yellow 16'
  • 36:05 'The Return of the Prime Meridian'
  • 44:40 Radio and installations
  • 47:46 'Stations' at Bergenhus Fortress
  • 50:56 Obelisks and boomboxes: performing 'Cleopatra’s Needles'
  • 55:14 'Sound barrier': radios as construction material
  • 59:31 Choreography and radio concerts
  • 62:01 Fibre Optics
  • 65:51 freq_out
28/06/2018 75' 16''
English

Time signals and radio taxis are some of the discreet expressions of radio that have disappeared from our everyday soundscape, with us barely registering when or why they have ceased to be broadcast. The internet and, more recently, digital audio broadcasting (DAB), are changing radio as we knew it. As a result, we are unconsciously forsaking its poetry: the artefacts, interferences, geographies, the instability, the fleetingness and other nuances.

Norwegian artist Maia Urstad works at the intersection of audio and visual art, with a particular fascination for the conncetions between technology and communication. Her work explores devices that are on the way to becoming obsolete – such as Morse code and two-way radio taxis – as well as others that are thriving, like optic fibre. Radio, of course, has a leading role at this crossroads.

And it does so in the form of sound installations, concerts, theatre, and elaborate performances. In the course of her explorations, Maia Urstad has worked with the Deutsche Welle radio archive, choreographed motor bikers and dancers, reinstated a forgotten meridian, lived alongside a Focke Wulf fighter aircraft, and recorded the taxis of Buenos Aires. And she has even used portable radio sets simultaneously as building blocks and loudspeakers, in her sound sculptures.

In this podcast we talk to Maia Urstad about nostalgia, time pips, AM, FM and DAB, about the importance of ska, about arches and obelisks, sounds in the fjord, and time capsules, about program 81, freq_out, and foghorns, and about local radio stations and lost tapes.

Playlist
01:27 Maia Urstad, “Meanwhile in Shanghai…” (installation), 2011
07:21 Sissel Lillebostad and Maia Urstad, “Vivat! 2”, 1994
12:37 Maia Urstad, “Neblina”, 1985
15:53 Maia Urstad, “Ether”, 1998
20:56 Maia Urstad, “Rush Hour Drive – recordings from Buenos Aires’ Taxi Radios” (installation), 2016
30:20 Maia Urstad, Excerpt from the outer layer of the “Stations” installation at Bergenhus Festning, 1999
33:09 Maia Urstad, “Yellow 16 / Gul 16” (permanent installation), 2010
37:55 Maia Urstad, “The Return of the Prime Meridian”, 2016
47:19 Maia Urstad, “Ether”, 1998
48:56 Maia Urstad, Excerpt from the outer layer of the “Stations” installation at Bergenhus Festning, 1999
49:47 Maia Urstad, “Sound Barrier” (installation), 2004-
52:50 Maia Urstad, “Cleopatra’s needles” (performance), 2000
56:50 Maia Urstad, “Sound Barrier” (installation), 2004-
01:00:47 Hilde Hauan Johnsen and Maia Urstad, “Fibre optic sound installations”, 2008
01:07:50 FREQ_OUT 8, Moderna Museet Stockholm (excerpt), 2012
01:14:04 FREQ_OUT 8, Moderna Museet Stockholm (excerpt), 2012

Son[i]aMaia Urstadradiosound artfemale producersMÆKUR

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