SSI



Spatial Sound
Institute


Sensory Airplanes
(2020)


Lukas Rehm

Sensory Airplanes is a project by artist and composer Lukas Rehm, tracing the emergence and consequentialities of posthuman self-conceptions along the gradients between hard sciences, mythology, the imaginary and the affective. Efforts by physicists emulating biological neural networks on electronic substrates are paralleled by philosophical advocacies to remodel thinking and knowledge production itself based on new insights in non-human agency. The surplus of meaning both are confronting and consequently producing is set in relation to preceding societal shifts introduced by new communication media as well as a recursive take on the ancient narrative of the invention of Mnemotechnics. The work is realized as an environment composition in multichannel moving image, 4D-Sound and animated light.


The principle forming the basis for combining staged scenes with observations of biological agents, seemingly inanimate landscapes, natural and technological artifacts as well as prototypes of neuromorphic machines is formulated in the works core conceptual features: "living structures, as complex systems that change with time can be considered as computers“ is a quote in the exposition of the work by Karlheinz Meier, lead scientist of the Human Brain Project, a large scale program researching and reverse engineering biological intelligence with the help of machine models. Consequential equations, simulacra, twins and the exemplary are also subject to Fahim Amir’s critique on anthropocentrism and western, image based modes of thought. The mythological twin pair Castor and Pollux – one mortal and one immortal until both transcend into an eternal existence in the stars – can be considered as model for the approximately different progressively turning into the indifferent. The twins appear in the adapted narrative around the inventor of Mnemotechnics Simonides of Keos, who is singing in praise on the banquette of a noble person – the scene is reimagined as a simulation where Simonides’ songs are rewritten by an artificial neural network trained on databanks about the twins in mythology and star constellation as well as techno-utopian theory from the silicon valley. The score is based on current research on ancient Greek harmonies in this segment, whereas in other parts fragments of Jean-Philippe Rameau’s Opera Castor et Pollux appear after being digitally processed or reimagined by machine intelligence. The technological trans humanism representing the fatalistic noble man running the simulation is distinguished from its twin sister, the critical trans-humanism by philosopher Janina Loh exemplifying the fallacies of the first in correspondence to Simonides own destiny: his enhanced memory enables him to identify the disfigured victims after the fatal end of the banquet. Simonides willing but demanding approach to the trauma of the catastrophe points back at the surplus of meaning introduced in the work by the sociologist Dirk Baecker. Any new form of information processing, including the ones we’re operating with when we are thinking introduces new sensitivities.


The project originates in the music theatre piece “Castor&&Pollux” by Lukas Rehm (moving image, spatial sound composition and stage) with Lisa Charlotte Friederich (stage direction and libretto) and Jim Igor Kallenberg (dramaturgy), produced by and premiered at Heidelberger Frühling in 2019. The interviews with Fahim Amir, Janina Loh and Dirk Baecker and were conducted by Jim Igor Kallenberg and directed by Lukas Rehm. Tilmann Rödiger acted as the projects DOP.


To learn more you can check:

-  An experience in Mozilla Hubs of the piece with the ambisonic mixdown mixed by the artist Lukas Rehm Rehm https://hubs.mozilla.com/iKUoFjT/

-  The presentation about the piece at the Jan Van Eyck Academie by Lukas Rehm (starting from 32:44) https://vimeo.com/525635521#t=1964s




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