art projects

Most of my personal works and project collaborations are rooted in the acoustic sphere, sound tracks or installations as well as radio works. It mostly revolves around the creative challenge to present something invisible like sound in space or how to imagine the wireless space of radio and how it can presented on stage or how it engages within an urban context. Coming from a media art background it always felt to me that to organise one’s own projects and media networks would be a part of the artistic practise. The same rings true for the curating of festivals and other social events. As it all started off with the enthusiasm for own, self-created and -organised projects and platforms as well as the intriguing opportunity to meet face-to-face with the collaborators, with whom one has been remotely working with, as well as other interesting and inspiring people.

steamy radiosauna

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From Sound to Waves to Territories

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From Sound to Waves to Territories

“Perhaps last traces of human existence will be radio waves beamed into space, travelling distances before they dissolve into noise.”
Curtis Roads in Micro-Sound
Perhaps last traces of radio waves [are] human existence beamed into space travelling distances before they dissolve into noise.”
Jan Hendrik Brueggemeier – From Sound to Waves to Territories

From Sound to Waves to Territories” is Jan Hendrik Brueggemeier’s creative PhD project (2010 -2014) at La Trobe University, Melbourne.

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Introduction to From Sound to Waves to Territories

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From Sound to Waves to Territories

  • !!! This section of the website is under heavy construction … More will happen here very soon … Apologies for any inconvenience !!!

professional background
practising media artist and producer / media and architectural interventions in the city / independent media networking / sound installations / radio art events /curating of festivals / Master in Media Arts & Design, Bauhaus University Weimar, chair for Experimental Radio (mentors: T. Kogawa, R. Homann)

Radio and the “schizophonic” Poetic of the urban Space

My creative PhD project “From Sound to Waves to Territories” focusses on the communicative and aesthetic challenges of the electro-acoustic space of radio connecting with the urban space. Here I intend to focus on the two particular locations involved in the radiophonic: the imaginary and the reality of the ‘city’ (as backdrop of the everyday).

My point of departure is the notion of the series as a genuine radio format invented by early US radio amateurs movement. I am interested in the series’ two main constituents, which in my view are the time-based notions of ‘repetition’ and ‘disruption’ and how they help to construct collectively a sense of territory and how this compares to similar cultural phenomena like play and ritual. Another way to describe this would be the “rhythmisation of the everyday”. It also connects to the Georges Sorel’s concept of the “social myth”.

Speaking from the experience of my own practice as a radio maker and media artist I have started to reflect differently about this territory I was actually transmitting into. While approaching the city from a Arts perspective, I feel unsatisfied with the common media business practice of analysing cities communication potential through market share and targeted audience groups. This dissatisfaction fostered my interest in communication as part of urban planning and media respective radio as a concrete tool for architectural and urban design – based on my reflection as a media practitioner about this space and its modi operandi.

Former works relating to media and the city: the neture series

My creative Ph.D strategy therefore consists out of two parts:

  1.  To form an own theoretical “transdisciplinary” framework called urban media scenography in order to approach the nexus of the contemporary city based on selected source from the area of philosophy, urban planning and media studies
  2. to produce a body of creative work which addresses the “city-ness” (Saskia Sassen).

Based on my recent research these two strategic parts (mentioned above) led me to identify two main focusses of my creative research:

  1. the role of the stranger in the network of radio and city
  2. the idea of sonic imaginative leaks or sonic leaks of imagination (not yet decided which wording I like betta)

The role of the stranger in the network of radio and city

  • A concrete urban condition, “on the ground” so to speak.
  • In contrary to the digital sphere where user activity can be precisely measured the conventional broadcast business still relies on to “statistically” assume its targeted audience based on the nature how the data surveys are being conducted and one can not technically measure the tuning in. A fact, which would translate to me, as they don’t really know, they assume. (example?)
  • More generally looking into the notion of the strange or the alien as a communicative challenge, this connects with the concept of a “responsive phenomenology” (Bernhard Waldenfels) and the idea of the creative answer, which means the “what” of an answer is and will be always made up but not the “whereupon” we are answering and this is the true challenge.

The idea of imaginative leaks or leaks of imagination

Here I am aiming from a sound perspective at what the following:

  • In his book “Poetics of Space” the French philosopher Gaston Bachelard unpacks the subconscious qualities of poetic imaginary which seem to leak in from a deeper level of human experience which is usually more hidden and less familiar to our everyday being in communication. The American conceptual artist Joseph Kosuth understands art as something that points or refers to the “unsayable”.
  • I want to connect this with the notion of the “schizo-phonic”. A term coined by the Canadian scholar R. Murray Schafer.

While I do not agree with all of Schafer’s arguments particular in relation to how he comes to terms with an actual moral judgement of a sensual experience from an ecological point of view. Nevertheless his term schizophonic is interesting to me, because I do consider that a split is taking place in the amplification process of mediation in general but to me this is taking place on a social, political and / or cultural level. Although I find the way Schafer is referencing schizophrenia quite cliche like I still appreciate its notion of the potential imaginative leak. However in terms of schizophrenia I prefer to align my work rather along the lines of the work of R. D. Laing or Gregory Bateson’s and their observation of the group dynamics of schizophrenia. In addition I find  Humberto Maturana Romesín’s remark important where he stresses that the difference between virtual and non-virtual realities can only be a cultural one but not one in terms of cognitive perception. This again could be related to R. D. Laing idea of the “reframing”.

Why radio?
- The oldest of the new media
- it’s sound driven and the way sound stimulates one’s imagination in particular because of a lacking visualisation
- it has this clear territorial bond,
- it has proven a strong media hybridity with e.g. online media
- the live moment
- truly global and consumes very little energy in comparison to other electronic media.

Recap:
As soon as one has space, time and energy one has rhythm. The radio format of the series as a mean “rhythmisation of the everyday” and collectively created imaginary territories and therefore similar to other cultural phenomena like play and ritual.

At the same time radio means a spatially defined and bonded territory in comparison to e.g. the Internet (although there can be hybrid media mixes), which in my case means the contemporary city with its urban conditions and challenges and the individual “cityness” of each location.

Approaching the existing genre of the “radio play” as an output for my creative work I would like extend its notion:
Radio as a play with listening and “schizo-phonic” poetic – radio as play with strangers in the city.

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Supervisors & Research Panel

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From Sound to Waves to Territories

  • Supervisors: Prof. Norie Neumark, Senior Lecturer John Tebbutt, La Trobe University
  • Research Panel: Prof. Norie Neumark, Senior Lecturer John Tebbutt, Senior Lecturer Peter Hughes (La Trobe University) and John Jacobs (producer, Nightair ABC Radio Australia)
  • Website: www.fromsoundtowavestoterritories.com
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Big Golden Zeppelin


This performance was conceived as a staged conversation between Friedrich Liechtenstein and Jan Hendrik Brüggemeier in a format of a radio show. This co-production of the Anhaltisches Theatre Dessau and the Bauhaus Dessau Foundation (“Funk Project”) appeared live on local TV as well as on stage in Dessau, Germany.

“On the pile of rubble of information, speculation and desires, not finished lines of thought, stories only incompletely told and anecdotes from a post modern approach to the subject of airship travel, or put in other words: in the light of failure, accidents and fantasms … the fact still remains that these airships managed reasonably well to establish a regular global air service for a couple of years and once airborne with an absolutely stunning scenic view.

Friedrich Liechtenstein and Jan Hendrik Brüggemeier take it from there, and throughout the show they develop this fragile but grand airy castle of splendour: The Big Golden Zeppelin. But this time in order to come back the Zeppelin must be bigger than its predecessors and golden.

Amusing as well as touching and during the performance one is tempted to think from time to time: … why not?

Liechtenstein and Brüggemeier are very serious dedicated to it – no question. This radio-play, which is partly a collage and partly a documentation of a series of real events. It includes footage from a very hot summer day in the German City of Dessau in Saxony-Anhalt, editorial commentary, kitchen conversations, telephone call ins, music and original bits of recordings. All put together in a classic radio feature style. This mix of spontaneous ideas and sensible thoughts leaves us on a roller-coaster ride through the cosmos of the Big Golden Zeppelin and how Liechtenstein and Brüggemeier understand it.”

This radio play (in German) is work-in-progress and develops as the project continues to evolve:

  • The Big Golden Zeppelin (53’30”)

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Photo credit: video stills from the TV appearance 2010

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Liturgy for Radio

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The Big Golden Zeppelin

Here a short excerpt from the Big Golden Zeppelin TV appearance:


Tuning In Before the Show (Based on Gregory Whiteheads Liturgy for Radio):

Liturgy for Radio Utopia (Gregory Whitehead)

Communication is community.
The technology of transmission
is the promise of one world
made whole, brought together,
all languages, all races, all cultures.

I dream of a time
when everybody on the planet lives,
breathes, and touches each other air.

A glorious communion
A celebration to end all celebrations
in a language to end all languages.

Communication is community.
The technology of transmission
is the promise of one world
made whole, brought together,
all languages, all races, all cultures.
I dream of a time
when everybody on the planet lives,
breathes, and touches each other on air.
A glorious communion, communion, communion.

A celebration to end all celebrations
in a language to end all languages.

Finnegan’s Wake!
Here Comes Everybody.

Finnegan’s Wake!
Here Comes Everybody.

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The Circle is red



An interactive installation composed of Light, Words and Sound based on the diaries and private letters of Oskar Schlemmer

On stage Oskar Schlemmer brought the painting in motion. His costume designs and space compositions taught the abstract form language of painting to jump and run. With the Bauhaus artist Oskar Schlemmer the theatre found connection with the artistic avantgarde of that time. The diarist Schlemmer is a witty and seismographic observer of a nervous epoch between the world wars aside from propaganda and party lines. He reveals his uncertainess, his doubts as modern protagonist at the breaking point of tradition and innovation.

The Circle is red is an interactive light and sound installation. The project was conceived and dramaturgically supervised by Jan Hendrik Brüggemeier. The listening environment by Ulrike Haage is based on the letters and diaries of Oskar Schlemmer. The Circle is red was produced for the Crash!Boom!Bau! Festival at the Nalepa Studios in Berlin.  In this radio play the actors Leslie Malton and Gerd Wameling perform as the speaking voices. The light designer Mattjakob dal Pozzo created a versatile spatial light zone, with which he will live interact during the performance.

“The Circle is red”, quote: Oskar Schlemmer, diary Octobre 1923

Artists

composition/radio play: Ulrike Haage (D)
concept/dramaturgy: Jan H. Brüggemeier (D)
light design: Matt Jakob dal Pozzo (I/GB)
voice/radio play: Leslie Malton (US/D)
voice/radio play: Gerd Wameling (D)
sound engineer: Philipp Reitberger (D)


with the friendly support of U. Jaïna Schlemmer and C. Raman Schlemmer, Oggebbio, Italy
(The Oskar Schlemmer Theatre Estate)

photo credit: Anke Neugebauer
For promotional and educational usage only, out of copyright reasons without sound:

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black clouds

In this installation at the Kuenstlerhaus Schloß Wiepersdorf designed Jan Hendrik Brueggemeier two ‘black clouds’ out of 420 small loudspeaker to display 6 discrete audio channels.

As a topic, clouds trigger manifold associations and are a largely known cultural phenomenon. ‘As-Sahab’, the name of the alleged media production unit of Al-Qaeda means “The Cloud” in Arabic. In the old testament it is reported, that god liked to hide his appearance behind a cloud when calling Moses on the seventh day of the creation of the earth. The cloud also serves as an analogy for radio and the more recent phenomenon of wifi and wireless culture. It describes how the reception area is spread out. As well, it leads to the first days of the radio, when people experienced radio as a god-like appearance – a disembodied voice addressed to them directly.

Radio, today, is on one hand a synonym for popular culture and mass distribution. On the other hand, it can be tagged with politics of territory and strategic warfare. It may be surprising, but to a certain degree radio is culturally and technologically rooted in war and military invention – similar to the Internet.

Along with this installation, a series of soundtracks shall follow: Love is in the Air is the initiation and first issue of the series of soundtracks dedicated to the Black Clouds installation.

Love is in the Air is composed of bits and fragments of recordings of the Lebanese radio dial during my stay in Beirut, and an audio collage of sound bits of popular love songs, that wildly and at certain points desperately spin between the right and the left channel of the audio-signal.

Love is in the Air – soundtrack:

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photo credit: Elina Julin

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RADIOSAUNA .. (don’t strip your clothes, unzip your communication!)

steamy radiosauna











graphics: Daniel Guischard

For the Meteor-Festival in Bergen, Jan Hendrik Brueggemeier produced the RADIOSAUNA performance together with the architect Daniel Guischard.

The RADIOSAUNA is an art installation for the public space and a common hotspot for social interaction and exchange in the city.

A mobile sauna (Finnish style) was positioned on a public square close to the harbour in Bergen, Norway. The sauna was equipped with microphones inside. The conversations inside and the atmospheric noises of the public sauna sessions were transmitted live on the local radio and online.

The RADIOSAUNA aimed to explore the similarities as well as the contradictions that unfold today in our distinction of the local and the global and the private and the public.

It combined the experience of traditional social places like the bathhouse or the sauna with the modern means of telecommunication and new media. It offered one possible notion of what a neighbourhood community action could feel like in the beginning of the 21st Century.

A playlist of audio snippets from the RADIOSAUNA sessions

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Single bits of audio from the RADIOSAUNA sessions

# Italian intro -

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# Singing -

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# Poetry round -

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# Chatting (excerpt 1) -

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# Moderation -

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# Chatting (excerpt 2) -

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# ‘my loneliness is killing me’ -

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