anthony fiumara

upcoming

counting eskimo words for snow

On November 8, Grafisch Atelier Den Bosch opens an exhibition on the color white, titled Wit is een Oude Meester (White is an Ancient Master), after a poem by K. Schippers. In collaboration with November Music, the headphone installation Counting Eskimo Words for Snow is going to be part of the exhibition. It can be heard by two visitors simultaneously, seated on sofas in the gallery space. The entrance is free.

Not so long ago in history, music would only come to sound when played by musicians – which made a work sound different with every performance. Only with the appearance of recordings we know the luxury of music that we can listen to anywhere, any time. We can control the sound, but we still hear an identical performance of a work set down in advance.

In the generative sound installation Counting Eskimo Words for Snow I make up a set of simple rules as usual, but the route and sound is determined by the rules themselves, on every moment again. The form is not fixed on beforehand. Every layer follows an unpredictable path within a given landscape, in an eternal permutation of possibilities. One could compare it with a Calder mobile, where the same takes place on a visual level.

This all makes Counting Eskimo Words for Snow a hybrid work: the installation unites the portability of a recording with the unpredictability of a living organism. You can listen to Counting Eskimo Words for Snow everywhere via headphones, but every time you listen the music will be different. It's like a place you roam in on your own. The music is unfinished; one can never tell what's going to happen next; one cannot know how, when and if it ever ends. That's what fascinates me.

November Music also presents a composer portrait that I wrote on Richard Rijnvos. The booklet is the first in a series of festival publications.