Online presentation & a discussion with Ida Hiršenfelder
DATE: Wednesday, 24 November 2021 | 17:00 CET (11:00 EST)
LOCATION: online stream
Paloma Kop: Magnetic Field Recordings
The Digital Dish will offer a view behind the scenes of Paloma Kop’s multimedia art practice, focused on the process used to create Magnetic Field Recordings (2021) and her ongoing series, Electromagnetic Earth. Today, electricity and magnetism are mainly considered in the context of human-made technologies, but nature, the earth and the cosmos are alive with all forms of radiation and electrical activity. The artist investigates the blurry boundaries between nature and machines as well as how recent technology provides new ways to observe and explore the environment.
Paloma Kop is a video and sound artist using feedback, electronic hardware and hybrid media processes to produce compositions, installations and performances. She deconstructs the boundaries between material space and electronic space and is interested in the universalities between natural phenomena, computing and chaos. She holds an MFA in Electronic Arts from Alfred University and has performed at Ibrida*Pluri Festival, Ann Arbor Film Festival, Ambient Church and others. Web: http://palomakop.tv
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foto: Paloma Kop
Ida Hiršenfelder (beepblip)is a sound artist and archivist. She makes immersive bleepy psychogeographical soundscapes using analogue electronics, DIY and modular synths, field recordings and computer manipulations. She is interested in bioacoustics, experimental and microtonal music. She was a member of the Theremidi Orchestra (2011–2017) and is currently a member of the Jata C group, researching bioacoustics and sound ecologies. Her solo albums Noise for Strings, Vol. 1 (2019) and Noise for Strings, Vol. 2 (2020) were published by the Kamizdat label. She is currently studying in the Masters of Sonology programme at the Royal Conservatoire in The Hague. Web: https://beepblip.org/
Cover image: Dorijan Šiško
Production: Ljudmila, Art and Science Laboratory, and Projekt Atol Institute.
With support from the Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Slovenia and the Municipality of Ljubljana – Department for Culture.