Lukas Kühne’s Tvísöngur: Sculpture for a Concrete, Uncompressed Voice

This article draws from fieldwork and investigates the site-specific sound sculpture Tvísöngur (2012), conceived by sculptor Lukas Kühne. Located on the mountainside in Seyðisfjörður, Northeast Iceland, Tvísöngur—also known as the ‘singing’ sculpture—is made from five interconnected domes, each tune...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Divergence Press
Main Author: Louvel, Olivia
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: University of Huddersfield Press 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.5920/divp.2024.03
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spelling crunivhuddpr:10.5920/divp.2024.03 2024-09-15T18:13:51+00:00 Lukas Kühne’s Tvísöngur: Sculpture for a Concrete, Uncompressed Voice Louvel, Olivia 2024 http://dx.doi.org/10.5920/divp.2024.03 unknown University of Huddersfield Press Divergence Press ISSN 2052-3467 journal-article 2024 crunivhuddpr https://doi.org/10.5920/divp.2024.03 2024-08-13T04:10:31Z This article draws from fieldwork and investigates the site-specific sound sculpture Tvísöngur (2012), conceived by sculptor Lukas Kühne. Located on the mountainside in Seyðisfjörður, Northeast Iceland, Tvísöngur—also known as the ‘singing’ sculpture—is made from five interconnected domes, each tuned to react to a specific pitch. The sculptural arrangement of the five domes is a direct three-dimensional representation of fifth singing, an ancient vocal practice consisting of a polyphonic chant where two vocalists sing in parallel fifths with voice-crossings at times. The article explores notions of public participation and corporeal engagement and investigates the sculpture’s aural agency and acoustic principles. Tvísöngur operates as a place of passage for a prospective vocal encounter within sculpture. The article establishes how Tvísöngur actively contributes to a sensorial experience of an uncompressed space and voice. This article is derived from Louvel’s thesis and her ongoing research on the interplay of voice with sculpture. Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland Seyðisfjörður University of Huddersfield Press Divergence Press
institution Open Polar
collection University of Huddersfield Press
op_collection_id crunivhuddpr
language unknown
description This article draws from fieldwork and investigates the site-specific sound sculpture Tvísöngur (2012), conceived by sculptor Lukas Kühne. Located on the mountainside in Seyðisfjörður, Northeast Iceland, Tvísöngur—also known as the ‘singing’ sculpture—is made from five interconnected domes, each tuned to react to a specific pitch. The sculptural arrangement of the five domes is a direct three-dimensional representation of fifth singing, an ancient vocal practice consisting of a polyphonic chant where two vocalists sing in parallel fifths with voice-crossings at times. The article explores notions of public participation and corporeal engagement and investigates the sculpture’s aural agency and acoustic principles. Tvísöngur operates as a place of passage for a prospective vocal encounter within sculpture. The article establishes how Tvísöngur actively contributes to a sensorial experience of an uncompressed space and voice. This article is derived from Louvel’s thesis and her ongoing research on the interplay of voice with sculpture.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Louvel, Olivia
spellingShingle Louvel, Olivia
Lukas Kühne’s Tvísöngur: Sculpture for a Concrete, Uncompressed Voice
author_facet Louvel, Olivia
author_sort Louvel, Olivia
title Lukas Kühne’s Tvísöngur: Sculpture for a Concrete, Uncompressed Voice
title_short Lukas Kühne’s Tvísöngur: Sculpture for a Concrete, Uncompressed Voice
title_full Lukas Kühne’s Tvísöngur: Sculpture for a Concrete, Uncompressed Voice
title_fullStr Lukas Kühne’s Tvísöngur: Sculpture for a Concrete, Uncompressed Voice
title_full_unstemmed Lukas Kühne’s Tvísöngur: Sculpture for a Concrete, Uncompressed Voice
title_sort lukas kühne’s tvísöngur: sculpture for a concrete, uncompressed voice
publisher University of Huddersfield Press
publishDate 2024
url http://dx.doi.org/10.5920/divp.2024.03
genre Iceland
Seyðisfjörður
genre_facet Iceland
Seyðisfjörður
op_source Divergence Press
ISSN 2052-3467
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5920/divp.2024.03
container_title Divergence Press
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