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Perhaps, Tan Dun is best known for the Oscar-winning
original score for Ang Lee's 'Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon' and
his concertos using stone, paper or water. However, Tan does not
believe in staying within the confines of music. His latest transgression
brought him into the realm of visual arts, when the conceptual and
multifaceted composer/conductor held his first solo multimedia exhibition
- 'Visual Music' - at the Shanghai Gallery of Art. Conceptualised
as an installation of visual music, the exhibit explored the process
of 'Deconstruction - Reconstruction - Resurrection' through the
rebuilding of abandoned pianos. This exhibition is part of a larger
series of visual music projects by Tan Dun involving hundreds of
pianos, which will be presented over several years around the world.
In addition, the exhibition also featured multimedia installations
and nearly a dozen prints and manuscripts, including the score he
composed for the film 'Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon.'
Like his musical pieces that create an occasion for the audience,
Tan's musical landscape invites the audience to explore his music
'visually'. The prelude to the exhibition featured elements of the
dismantled piano laid out on the floor in a circular pattern reminiscent
of a Zen meditation garden. It seemed to imply the decomposition
of civilisation and yet, at the same time, the relics conveyed a
sense of eternity. The theme 'Deconstruction - Reconstruction -
Resurrection' is further exemplified through two deconstructed pianos
that formed a pyramidal rubble of keys, chords and other assorted
piano parts. Three monitors completed the background, featuring
video footages that portrayed the various phases in the deconstruction
and reconstruction of the piano. In it, we saw Tan himself wielding
a sledgehammer and slowly hacking away the old instruments. The
pounding smashing sound resembled the earth-shaking music of Beethoven's
Symphony No.5. Another part of the installation featured a resurrected
piano with multi-coloured keys. This reversal of the usual black
and white piano keys disrupted the visual assumption of the piano
player. Here, Tan played with the abstract quality of sound and
vision and brought them back to their origin. He proposed a new
experience by altering the musical property of colour that draws
no intuitive parallels between emotion and colour.
'For me, there are no boundaries between the visual and the audio
in art creation itself. They constitute a unified, yet circular
realm for my thinking,' said Tan Dun as he discussed the topics
of interdisciplinary practice and media. Tan first discovered some
'retired' pianos accidentally in the warehouse of a music school
in Shanghai. Each piano had been played by hundreds of people to
such an extent that a little smooth dent had formed on each key.
Standing amidst them, he felt like he was in the middle of a huge
ruin of human history, listening to the harmonious sound emitted
when the key hit the chords. The sound seemed to recount numerous
unending stories, answering numerous unanswered questions to the
past. After experiencing different space-time change, the appearance
of these pianos might be old and tattered, but they still make a
beautiful sound like new pianos. The idea to create 'visual music'
hence sprouted in Tan's heart. He began to collect old pianos, to
send them for repair and remove all unusable and tattered parts.
Utilising the remaining chords and body, he redesigned, assembled
and created a new 'visual music sculpture' that allows man to play
or make music through computer engineering means. Through this artistic
act, Tan began to record voices from his innermost heart and amalgamating
them with space-time values, attempting to continue to recount untold
stories through these resurrected pianos. Time, war and disaster
might be able to destroy the external appearance of all matters,
but music and dreams will never be extinguished.
Contemporary art is an activity of transgression and manipulation
of media. Wassily Kandinsky and Paul Klee broke away from realistic
representation by using colour and composition to express the abstract
quality of music. The musical notation and performances of John
Cage had a huge impact on contemporary visual art forms like new
media and web art. He composed audio and visual artistic elements
that operate in complete unison and can no longer be separated.
As a visual exhibition, Tan's exhibition might not provide new insights.
Yet, it is another attempt to cross over into new genres, blurring
the lines between art and music and blending Tan's own modernist
style with classical traditions, from the East and the West. He
is reciting his concept of 'Samsara' through the pianos. 'There
is no beginning or end to life. Only continuity.'
Kwah Meng Ching
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