|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
This site contains a selection of work; 2010-2013. More info + cv: download PORTFOLIO | CONTACT ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– UPCOMING: Arltline digital festival, Karlskron, may 2013 // Svilova.org (solo), Göteborg, juni 2013 // Opening perrmanent soundinstallation, Röselidskolan, Lerum, august 2013 // Kulturhuset Borgen (solo), Gislaved, december 2013 // Konstepidemin (solo), Göteborg, mars 2014 RECENT: Nordiska Akvarellmuséet, TWEAKS, grupputställning mars 2013 // Doc Lounge (screening), Storan, Göteborg, 12/3 2013 // Karlskrona Konsthall (solo), opening 2013-01-26 // contribution to www.lastdaysofanalogue.com // Göteborgs konstmusem, I dialog med samlingarna (recension) // contribution to Peter Eccher: SLUTRAPPORT 2012:1, Galleri box // The sound of IT 3, Garage 4141, San Diego 2012-08-18 // June feature culturehall.com |
|
Jesper Norda (b. 1972) has a background as a musician but half way trough his training to become a composer he changed into visual art. In 2002 he graduated with an MA from Konsthögskolan Valand in Gothenburg. Since then he has been working both with music and visual art. In both art forms with the same artistic consistency. In his visual art practice he expands the conceptual base into simple spatial operations made up of objects, text or light, sometimes linked to popular culture and sometimes linked to entirely personal experiences. ”A main thread in his artistry is a constant questioning of the borderlines between sound and silence. The visual and the sounding |
|
All the letters in King James Bible. In original order, spacing between each letter, no capital letter, no punctuation. Part of solo exhibition Karlskrona konsthall 2013 / review / more images / TV-spot (SVTplay) |
|
This piece was installed in three adjacent rooms on the 5th floor of the Gothenburg Museum of Art. These rooms mostly contains religious art from 1400-1600. The video was displayed in the center room. The sound in this work is based on JS Bach’s, Nun komm’ der Heiden Heiland, in a piano transcription by F. Busoni.The part of the music that is played by the right hand is heard through a speaker in the right room, the part played by the left hand is heard through a speaker in the left room. The video consists of an extreme closeup of some piano keys, trembling by the touch of the pianist. When facing the video in the middle room, the sound is “whole”, when you move to one of the other rooms you experience the split of the sound. When standing close to the left speaker, the music played by the left hand rings out on its own, lonely and fragile, the music played by the right hand is heard only very faint, from the distance. And vice versa. ”My first composition professor Ole Lützow-Holm said in an interview, ”the melody is the vibrating thought”. I read this interview right before I would start my education at the college of music... but I can not recall me ever asking him about the meaning of it? In any case, I have carried that sentence with me ever since, sometimes it will come to me when I am not sure of what I am doing, sometimes when I am having a hard time trying to start up a new project. And now it comes to me when I am supposed to write something about my work at the 5th floor at Göteborgs konstmuseum. |
|
The Goldberg Variation is based on JS Bach's works Goldberg Variations. Each note / impact is played every two seconds. The dynamics are equalized, all drama and musical direction is removed. The original work is about 30 minutes, this version is 12 hours and 25 minutes. 13 hour sunrise: a black surface where a line of 33 pixels turn white every two seconds. From left to right, top to bottom. "The new works by Jesper Norda currently presented at Konstfrämjandet Örebro revolves around the concept of time, or rather the interstices, those that we constantly experience but never think about. Using methods as printed pages with all the seconds of a day and night, where the blackness of the ink varies according to the solar power, we are made aware of these gaps. By converting one medium to another we get insight into the invisible but essential components that create the space that we exist in, and in particular the perceptual process that we experience it with. Abstract substances often form the backbone of Jesper's work, such as the frequency of a sound wave and how it affects us, but especially the time it takes for a sound wave to travel, the vibrations it creates or the traces after a sound has subsided. The silence is as important as the sound. The illusion only illustrates reality. With a parallel career as a sound producer and composer with three solo albums behind him, Jesper's sensitivity to the rhythm and the silence in between is a detailed game of pulling apart and putting together. A calculated order re-organizes experiences to clockworks, where mechanically depicted words create mental images, or where every note becomes deserted and left to echo out alone, accompanied by a sunrise that lasts for 13 hours. Reduced to abstraction and the colors black and white, the room lights up, slowly and patiently, pixel by pixel. Time is eminently physical, and no moment is ever the same. Everything changes, all the time, with the tremendous power of a progressive movement." |
|
This piece was comissioned by Kalmar konstmuseum: a solo exhibition in the main hall that would contain sound only. A man is speaking about the room, the measurements of the room, the amount of air molecules, the weight of the air. The voice describes how the air molecules behave differently when exposed to different kind of soundwaves. He speaks about the intense air pressure in the room, the intense air pressure in the cranium of the listener and the balance between those two spaces: the state we call silence. "What about doing nothing? Just be where you are, in your room, with the thoughts coming and
going. It’s kind of what we do, all the time, isn’t it? Like right now, when you are reading this text? Catalogue (swedish/english). Texts by Marie Norin and Magnus Haglund. |