'Atmosphere for Enjoyment: Harry Bertoia's Environment for Sound'

Details
Title | 'Atmosphere for Enjoyment: Harry Bertoia's Environment for Sound' |
Author | Museum of Arts and Design (MAD) |
Duration | 0:15 |
File Format | MP3 / MP4 |
Original URL | https://youtube.com/watch?v=g3cBeNidauA |
Description
MAD's exhibition 'Atmosphere for Enjoyment: Harry Bertoia's Environment for Sound' features an interactive installation of sounding sculptures created by Bertoia’s son Val Bertoia.
Harry Bertoia’s career spanned just over thirty-five years. Known to many as the designer of the “Diamond” chair still in production today by Knoll, Bertoia was also a prolific maker of prints, jewelry, and sculpture—both intimate and monumental—that grapple with properties of light, volume, and sound. He created much of his work from metal wire and rods; toward the middle of his career, he discovered that when the rods strike one another, they make lush, resonant sounds. By the early 1960s he was creating prototypes for his sounding or tonal sculptures, work that would eventually occupy the remaining years of his career.
These sounding or tonal sculptures would become collectively known as Sonambient, a combination of the Latin roots of the words “sound” and “environment.” In 1968 Bertoia began to set up the eighteenth century stone barn on his property in Pennsylvania, to house a selection of his sounding sculptures and gongs. There he recorded 360 (known) reel-to-reel tapes of the sculptures. The barn is still standing today, with ninety-one original sounding sculptures installed inside, as Bertoia had intended them: an environment for sound.
'Atmosphere for Enjoyment' is a modest attempt at capturing Bertoia’s intent for this vast body of work through sound, interactivity, performances, and a range of ephemera.
Video by Butcher Walsh.