I scuffled my way out of a computer science class in Rolfe
Hall when I put on my earphones and began the trek to the Broad Art Center. In
five minutes, Bill Fontana’s presentation titled “Acoustical Visions” was going
to start, but I was in no rush. I was listening to David Bowie’s aptly-titled song
“Sound and Vision,” as my mind was transitioning from programming syntax rules
to artistic expectations. Bowie sang about “waiting for the gift of sound and
vision,” and it provoked me to make speculations on Fontana’s creative process.
Nevertheless, the ebullient, catchy tune of the song got me revved up for his
presentation.
I made it just in time! As I entered a dark room and took a
seat in the back, Fontana began to introduce himself to the audience. He was a
composer who believed that all sounds were inherently musical. His works are
called “sound sculptures,” inspired by the earth, man-made structures, diverse landscapes,
and renewable energy as well as realized by combinations of microphones for
airborne sounds, hydrophones for underwater sounds, and accelerometers for
vibrations in materials and structures. He traveled all over the world to
create these sound sculptures, from the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco to
the natural hot springs of Tuscany. Wherever he visited, he would map the recording
devices in great detail to capture various sounds and mixing them to convey his
“emotional responses” to the “heart beats of the earth.”
Fontana showcased some of his works to us, and I was
inspired by his use of technology in art and how industrialization can be portrayed as art. One was an old bell sitting atop a skyscraper
in New York City. He had a camera right next to the bell overlooking the
various buildings in the city and attached an accelerometer on the bell. What
we heard were the internal sounds of the bell as the winds were howling and the
cars were passing in the streets. It sounded like a century-old gong that rang
for eternity. Another one that stood out to me was the Golden Gate Bridge. He
mounted a camera on top of one of the Bridge’s cables as well as an
accelerometer there and a microphone at the base to capture the sounds of the
cable rattling to the winds, the sounds of the cars passing by on the road, and
the sounds of cars as heard from underneath the bridge—during various times of
the day, whether it was foggy, early in the morning, or late at night! I expected
a cacophony but instead, I was treated to a surprisingly harmonious ambiance combining
nature and city life.
It’s amazing that Fontana would visit UCLA to give this
wonderful talk. The Golden Gate Bridge part was just a small peak of his latest
project called “Shadow Soundings,” which is still in exhibition today at Lisbon’s
MAAT museum.
His works all showed me something: my life is inundated with
sound, whether I’m entering a metro subway or witnessing Old Faithful in
Yellowstone, but I tend to ignore sounds around me. Through his works, I’m
hearing sounds that I never knew existed, perhaps those I could’ve caught if I
concentrated harder! I realized that art can be as sonically inspiring as it is
visually inspiring, made possible by various technologies. He showed that every
object carries an inherent sound that has yet to be expressed. Surely, the two
cultures of art and science can merge to produce more beautiful art!
I would recommend this event because it will not only help cultivate
an appreciation for the sounds of our planet Earth but also insightfully demonstrate
that art has no boundaries.
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| Bridge |
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| Bell |
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| Fontana and me |
Sources:
Chaya, Lynn. “Bill Fontana's Shadow Soundings Exhibition at
the MAAT Museum.” Designboom | Architecture & Design Magazine, 27 Feb.
2018, www.designboom.com/art/maat-museum-bill-fontana-shadow-soundings-lisbon-10-24-2017/.
Whiting, Sam. “Artist Bill Fontana Is of Sound Mind.” San
Francisco Chronicle, San Francisco Chronicle, 14 Aug. 2017, www.sfchronicle.com/art/article/Artist-Bill-Fontana-is-of-sound-mind-11818413.php.
Kim, John. “Bell.” 4 Apr. 2018. JPEG file.
Kim, John. “Bill Fontana and Me.” 4 Apr. 2018. JPEG file.
Kim, John. “Bridge.” 4 Apr. 2018. JPEG file.
O’Leary, Chris. “‘Sound and Vision," the Bowie Song
That Contains Within It All Bowie Songs.” Slate Magazine, 11 Jan. 2016,
www.slate.com/blogs/browbeat/2016/01/11/the_making_of_sound_and_vision_the_archetypal_david_bowie_song.html.



It is very true that there are so many sounds going on around us that we seem to completely miss in everyday, I am now going to start noticing more sounds just because you made that point. This event sounds very interesting and I would like to experience the sounds of "our planet Earth".
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