• en
  • sk
  • E
    x
    h
    i
    b
    i
    t
    i
    o
    n
    s

    MILAN ADAMČIAK: SELF-CTION

    hunt kastner

    Bořivojova 85, Prague 3, Czech Republic

     www.huntkastner.com

     

    28|06| – 12|8|2022

    curator: Daniel Grúň

    in collaboration with: Matej Gavula and Ján Gašparovič

     

    hunt kastner is very pleased to present an exhibition dedicated to phono-acoustic works by Milan Adamčiak, curated by Daniel Grúň and in cooperation with the Július Koller Society in Bratislava. The exhibition includes a spatial installation, of Adamčiak’s visual, graphic, and concrete music conceived by Matej Gavula, accompanied by a sound installation made specifically for the exhibition, by the Slovak artist Ján Gašparovič.

     

    The exhibition “Self-ction” of work by the important Slovak composer, musicologist, performer and poet Milan Adamčiak (1946- 2017), focuses on the relationships between the different approaches to the (re)production of visual music in the artist’s work. In this exhibition, Adamčiak’s extensive artistic universe is presented to the public in a new curatorial model in the form of a synesthetic environment, based on a combination of sound, chromatic and haptic sensations. A wide range of distinctive authorial techniques and procedures, which Adamčiak had systematically been developing from the mid-1960s onwards, is incorporated into the associative flow of a sound environment. The aim of this installation is to draw the viewer’s attention to the starting points in natural elements and folk cultures, as well as to the sound situations played out on a sheet of paper, resulting in a specific expressiveness at the interface of scientific exactness, unorthodox spirituality and shamanic earthiness. Specific poems, graphic scores, collages, drawings and sound objects by Milan Adamčiak, open up the possibility of mental participation in processes where the artist set the basic propositions, defined the playing elements and designed the playing fields, which the recipient further develops, adapts and modifies according to their own capabilities.  

     

    Movement according to spatio-temporal and visual-sound schedules takes place on the basis of graphic characters representing musical instruments, voices or sounds, composed into repetitive patterns and dynamic variations with the help of an open grid or raster structures. The curatorial interpretation of these potentials contained in Adamčiak’s work, is developed into a form of sound-spatial installation created by Matej Gavula (1972) and Ján Gašparovič (1981). Gavula designed an installation made of transparent plexiglass, which serves as a transparent disposition and a circular carrier, inviting the spectators to move around it, thus rotating the bodies in space, as anticipated in several of the exhibited works by Adamčiak.  The circular rotations of the floor plan mirror the score of Hommage a A. Rimbaud, from 1969, for five dancers and five singing pairs, which has been enlarged and digitally transferred to a transparent vinyl foil placed on the window at the entrance to the gallery, thus resembling a movable lens hood or color mandala. In Ján Gašparovič’s sound installation, four vibrating speakers are connected to the gallery’s window panes, which relay the hydrophonic recording of a river flow, in an hour-long loop that is started and graded with one second interval. The accumulation of sound in time and the immersion of listeners into the flow below the surface freely develops upon the motif of the legendary performance and happening “Water Music”, where Adamčiak, together with Jozef Revall and Róbert Cyprich, played for the audience in and under the water in the Juraj Hronec dormitory pool in Bratislava in 1970.

     

    The exhibition further emphasizes the associations between the textures of typescript rasters, grids of graphic scores and the patterns of woven carpets from the Liptov and Upper Zemplín regions. These parallels, or even inspirations in folk embroidery and woven patterns,  were very important for Adamčiak’s visual poetry. The carpets transferred to the walls of the gallery complete the synesthetic environment, involving all the senses of the viewer in the reading and reception of Adamčiak’s inner (mental) music as a universal and intensely experienced process following the landscape, nature and folk traditions. 

     

    Daniel Grúň

     

     

    Exhibition photos: Michal Czanderle

    ×