“[...] a writing with pneumatic, electronic, or gaseous indifferent supports [...] embracing all that flows and counterflows, the gushings of mercy and pity knowing nothing of meanings and aims [...] the pure process that fulfils itself, and that never ceases to reach fulfilment as it proceeds – art as ‘experimentation’.”
Gilles Deleuze & Felix Guattari [
Anti-Oedipus, 1973]
“A work should include its environment, is always experimental [unknown in advance]”
John Cage [
Themes and Variations, 1980]
Borderline: lines of demarcation.
The three-day festival attempts to create artistic conditions that probe various lines of demarcation, challenging the prejudice that comes with conditions of identity, and the contradictions that underlie this ever-fluid condition, in an indirectly and subtle way; using experimentation to undermine the concept of division, but without ignoring the different sublayers that define distinct artistic approaches.
The programme will highlight the individuality of each artist, while seeking to achieve a counterpoint and interactivity between them in spatial, musical and audience terms. Distancing itself from psychological symbolisms, stasis and the lack of contact that comes with specialization, Borderline’s focus is on restlessly playful, relentlessly rhythmic movement, on instability and on formal variety.
And because, for some, the term ‘experimentation’ calls to mind the austerity of manifestos or academic approaches, we imagine building our three-day festival and the prospects entailed by the above as a call to participation and as personal interpretation; as something open—hence multidimensional—and poetic.
Pierre Bastien & Phonophani
Pierre Bastien has created a jazzy noir atmosphere based on woody percussion sounds and his trumpet. He will be appearing live with his mechanical Meccano orchestra. Phonophani creates a minimal, electronic ambience with an emphasis on samples and discrete pulses. This new collaboration is sure to surprise.
Phill Niblock & Τhomas Ankersmit
Two musicians from different generations take an in-depth approach to ‘noise’ and the sort of detailed composition that requires both time and thoroughness. One of the two-hour concert’s three parts will be accompanied by films made by Phill Niblock.