Alan Poma: Soundscapes
5790 Compton Ave, Los Angeles, CA 90011, USA
Saturday, April 27 at 4:00 PM 6:00 PM
Ends Apr 27, 2024
Soundscapes, LAND’s programming series dedicated to experimental music and sound-based practices, continues on Saturday, April 27 with The Gold Fish, a performance by multidisciplinary artist Alan Poma curated for LAND by Paulina Lara. The Gold Fish reimagines the birth of a mythical creature from the wetlands adjacent to Lake Titicaca, situated on the border between Bolivia and Peru. Near Lake Titicaca, there are artificial basins called ‘The Fountain of the Incas.’ The man-made agriculture systems stem from indigenous technology that has a landscape that connects various times and cultural traditions. Utilizing field recordings, Alan will capture sound from natural habitats at both dawn and dusk at Augustus F. Hawkins Nature Park. The Gold Fish combines music, costumes, singing, and traditional Andean dance from the perspective of Andean Futurism. The composition itself draws inspiration from the sonic communication in wetlands, emphasizing wildlife and urban sounds to underscore the intangible essence of the landscape interaction between the wetlands and the urban environment; these spaces serve as natural and public areas within an urban setting, hosting both wildlife and community members. On Saturday, April 27, Alan will play eight field recordings on cassette, rescore, and live mix the works on site at Augustus F. Hawkins Nature Park. Alan Poma (b 1979, Lima Peru) is a multidisciplinary sound artist, whose work has focused on creating site-specific projects and spectacles. His presentations often integrate performance, video art, visual art, sound art and scientific research, creating productions that provide sensory journeys for viewers. In recent years he has developed a series of live events that reflect an investigation into the futurist Russian Opera Victory Over the Sun (1913), working with an interdisciplinary group of collaborators including anthropologists, historians and physicists. With their input, Poma has raised a close relationship between Russian futurism and Andean culture, drawn from their shared iconographies.While at Delfina Foundation, Poma will further this line of work by researching links between his work and English Vorticism, in addition to developing a new opera inspired by the vorticist play Enemy of the Stars. Alan’s residency results in an exhibition at the Museo Mario Testino (MATE), Lima, in February 2017. This performance is made possible in part by a grant from the City of Los Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs. Free to attend with RSVP