Featuring Big Bang
Produced by maraa, a media and arts collective as part of "Sounds of Labour," a project tracing labour practices in Bangalore that are systematically invisibilised.
The multi-channel sound and video installation ‘The Hands, Amplified — The Voices, Responding” brings the sounds of physical labour carried out in Bangalore’s Koramangala Slum Cluster into an intergenerational conversation with four young artists from the area. In poetic responses to recordings of the everyday work of the blacksmith, metal workers, dhobi (washermen) and sewing units, they voice their memories of having grown up listening to these sounds and their personal experiences of witnessing this work. In the installation, the public moves through each composed sound environment. First, there is the metal work; as one walks further, the space fills with the sounds of sewing machines, then the blacksmith’s furnace and hammering. At the very end, there is the gentle slapping of cloth, spray of water, and low rumble of tumble dryers in the Dhobi Ghat. These sounds are articulated by the words of Sathya, Robin, Sanghamitra, and Surya, as their voices resound through the space and projections of their texts illuminate the walls.
Field recordings: Alex Mohan & Ekta
Sound Composition & Installation: Chelsea Leventhal
Poetic Responses / Voices: Sathya, Robin, Surya, Sanghamitra (Big Bang)
Studio Recording: Megha Varsha, Nihal Passahna & Chelsea Leventhal
Coordination & Tech Support: Nihal Passanha
This collaboration is supported by the Goethe-Institut Max Mueller Bhavan Bangalore.
Video documentation
"The Hands, Amplified — The Voices, Responding" at Art-in-Transit, Cubbon Park Metro Station, Bangalore