Norie Neumark, Maria Miranda, Richard Vella, Greg White, David Bartolo: Shock in the Ear
Artist(s):
Title:
- Shock in the Ear
Exhibition:
Creation Year:
- 2000
Medium:
- Interactive CD-ROM
Category:
Keywords:
Artist Statement:
” … like an earthquake that suddenly comes into your life and reduces your life into nothing, and when you return to normality your perceptions, your feelings are different. Every time I see a landstorm, I remember my own landstorm. Very personal … it’s like a little secret always I have with me.” — Juan Miranda, Shock in the Ear
Shock in the Ear is an experimental new media art work. It evokes the moment of shock and its aftermath as a sensual experience. From culture shock to electric shock and reverberating beyond into shock aesthetics, shock resonates with deep and abrupt physical and psychic change. The project of Shock in the Ear is to engage the user at a sensual level with shock as a bodily experience – to evoke shock not at the crashing sensational moment of impact but in its sensual aftermath. It aims to disrupt perceptions as the user explores the moment after the event – a dislocated time/space of shifted perceptions and senses.
Shock in the Ear expresses the shocking concept that sound is essential to interactivity, as a new and engaging artistic form, because sound goes beyond the interface, into time, into the body, and into the imagination. Visually, the work disrupts conventional CD-ROM aesthetics and kinaesthetics, with its painterly, textured, and sensuous images, which interrogate painting conventions and history, and play with the relation between painting and multimedia.
Creating and articulating sound and image together in an innovative way, Shock in the Ear engages with interactive possibilities beyond simple point-and-click, immersing the user in emotional, sonic, and visual texture. At the moment of interactivity, the work opens up the CD-ROM medium’s potential for intimacy.
Shock in the Ear is an intense and poetic work, composed through interactive screens, stories, performances, music, and sound. Refusing the slickness and control of cyberspace, the work explores instead the potential of new media for poetic movement, understandings, emotions, and sensations.
Other Information:
Concept, direction, and sound
Norie Neumark
Visual concept, painting, and design
Maria Miranda
Music
Richard Vella
Technical Producer and Programmer
Greg White
Interface Consultant
David Bartolo