There is a Point at Which Methods Devour Themselves || Pedro Oliveira

Multi-channel sound piece on the limits and failures of machine and human listening.

A small gallery with seven speakers hanging from the ceiling, forming a circle in the middle of the gallery. The view is from behind the speaker circle.

Details:

Date: Sept 9 - Oct 7, 2022

Gallery Hours:

Thursday - Saturday 1 - 4:30pm

or By Appointment

Location: Poolside Gallery

Partner: Send + Receive

Video Pool Media Arts Centre has teamed up with Send + Receive: A Festival of Sound to present a multi-channel sound piece by Pedro Oliveira. "There is a Point at Which Methods Devour Themselves" (2020) is a multi-channel sound piece on the limits and failures of machine and human listening.

The piece places the listener at the center of the question 'what makes a voice human?', as a rendition of Elomar Figueira Mello's 1989 song 'Balada do Filho Pródigo' unfolds in the room.
In this rendition, the voice of Greek singer Aimilia Varanaki – who learned the song by ear and without any knowledge of Brazilian Portuguese – is constantly de- and reconstructed through resonant filters and spectral synthesis, blurring the lines between recording, reproduction, re-synthesis, and reverberation, while cutting across the textures of language, prosody, articulation, and the materiality of sound.
This work is part of a long-term research project on the so-called 'dialect recognition software', a proprietary technology that utilizes similar techniques as those employed in the sound piece. This software has been in use since 2017 exclusively by the German Office for Migration and Refugees in cases of undocumented asylum seekers, as supporting evidence towards deportation. The error margin of this software is reported to be around fifteen to twenty percent.
Commissioned by the Max-Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics (Frankfurt, DE)

About The Artist

Pedro Oliveira (1985, São Paulo) is a researcher, artist, and educator interested in a decolonizing inquiry of listening and the articulations of sonic violence at the borders of the EU. Currently he is a fellow of the Junge Akademie der Künste Berlin under the program 'AI Anarchies'. He holds a PhD from the Universität der Künste Berlin.