Drifts Along
by SABIWA
For this new audio-visual installation by SABIWA at the Bath House Galleries the artist spent a week in residence, collecting material from the surrounding area to build a three-channel film and immersive soundscape. SABIWA’s practice deals with the porosity of bodies and spaces, partly inspired by personal experiences of physical exertion and the changes to how one experiences time and the self during injury, sickness and recovery. Drifts Along explores what SABIWA refers to as ‘micro space’; a personal reality derived from past experiences, where the artistic process investigates a poetic relationship between this perceived reality and belief.
Drifts Along was a collage created from the artist’s previous work and new material, and in turn this material has been taken forward into future work in other places. Coincidentally during SABIWA’s week in residence the artist was able to document the momentous spectacle of Huddersfield Technical College being demolished, and as such the work is both rooted in time and place, but also creates an opportunity for a wider reflection on the cycles of destruction and regeneration that our environments, whether local or global, are subject to.
The work was presented across multiple intersecting screens, with the equipment and workings visible as the visitor’s attention was drawn around the space to different points during the installation’s thirty-minute cycle. Contrasting vantage points were invoked, sometimes seeming to be inside a body or underwater, and other times floating above; sometimes microscopic, sometimes massive. Through SABIWA’s careful editing and composition these viewpoints were eventually synthesized into one shifting, undulating whole. Beanbags were provided for visitors to be physically comfortable while they experience the work, and subtle works on paper were dotted around the space to be discovered amidst the light and sound.
Click this link to watch the artist talk by SABIWA that took place on 21st March, part way through her residency.
Through public cultural programmes, the arts and humanities research taking place across our subject areas can interact with and feed into the grass roots cultural activity taking place in Huddersfield and the wider Kirklees area. As an organisation, ame are nationally recognised for their support of contemporary classical, sound art and improvisational practices, with a programme of performances and exhibitions that brings highly regarded practitioners to Huddersfield audiences.
SABIWA is an experimental electronic producer and performer from Taiwan, residing in Berlin. She produces, records and dissects sounds and images from natural and synthetic sources, making them interact with complex texture and abstract patterns, also using her voice processed as guiding path in her compositions.