PRINTEMPS SILENCIEUX

2023-03-03T17:10:50+01:00

Printemps Silencieux

LISTENING ROOM IN 2162, ENAPOLIS MUSEUM

Printemps Silencieux (Silent Spring) takes us to the year 2162 in the city of Enapolis, where the inhabitants are walled in and have never known or even felt the presence of the ‘outside’. Upon entering a room of the city museum, the visitor can read the following label:

‘The Enapolis Museum regularly excavates our basements. We find a number of objects, mostly damaged, obsolete or unknown. Among them, a device that could finally be restored and explored. It appears to have belonged to Gaëtan Gromer, a 21st-century sound artist who lived on the Enapolis construction site. It is likely that, throughout his life, the artist collected a considerable database of field recordings recorded by himself or by collaborators. According to what we have discovered about this device, the practice of field recording consisted in particular of recording, in the open air, sounds produced by human activities and/or by the natural environment.

This exceptional document from the beginning of the 21st century allows us to give you the opportunity to listen to these astonishing ‘soundscapes’ composed of typical sounds of the environment of this distant time and which have probably all disappeared in 2162.

The title was inspired by an unfinished work by the artist referring to a prophetic text written in 1962, exactly two centuries ago, by an author named Rachel Carson.

NB: This work is part of the cycle Demain c’est loin, it can be exhibited with the four other creations: Scintillements, Unedo, Sans faire de Vagues…, Enapolis

Created for the 2022 Ososphere festival – Strasbourg

Credits

Artistic director: Gaëtan Gromer

Recordings : Gaëtan Gromer, Marin Lambert, Marc Namblard

Control room: Valérie Bajsca et Cyrille Siffer

Support : L’Ososphère

Photo : © Yoann Bourreau

UNEDO

2024-10-14T10:22:47+01:00

Unedo

SOUND INSTALLATION – SCULPTURE

A tree appears to be covered in concrete. A deep, gravelly sound is emitted every time the world’s forests permanently lose, due to massive deforestation and the relentless artificialisation of the world, the equivalent of the total area of the city block* you are currently in. This process makes it possible to give substance to this staggering statistic: currently, one hectare of forest disappears from the surface of the globe every 1.11 seconds. 

But from this sinister tree springs a small branch from a small living shrub: a strawberry tree (arbutus unedo). A pyrophilous plant, the dormancy of the seeds of the arbutus is lifted by contact with fire, allowing it to conquer areas devastated by fire.

NB: This work is part of the cycle Demain c’est loin, it can be exhibited with the four other creations: Printemps Silencieux, Scintillements, Sans faire de Vagues…, Enapolis

_______________________

Credits :

Artistic director, conception : Gaëtan Gromer

Manufacturing : Gaëtan Gromer, Nicolas Schneider

Electronics : Benoît Jester

Production : Les Ensembles 2.2

Many thanks to Claude Peter

With support from the city of Sélestat

Photos : ©Gaëtan Gromer

Details

Exposed for the first time parc des remparts de Sélestat – 2021.

Exposed for the 2022 edition of the Ososphère festival.

 

SANS FAIRE DE VAGUES …

2023-03-03T17:09:34+01:00

Sans faire de vagues …

Sharks are massively affected by the lucrative finning trade. Since the 10th century, a number of miraculous virtues have been attributed to them. However, it has been widely demonstrated that this is a myth and that, on the contrary, they are bioaccumulators and therefore carriers of high concentrations of heavy metals. Ironically, they have no taste.

The work consists of three life-size shark sculptures (white, hammerhead and thresher) with their fins removed. Every time it makes a sound, somewhere in the world, a shark is thrown back into the sea, mutilated, doomed to several days of agony. The finning trade is so huge that the overall shark population has declined by more than 90% in exploited areas. The disappearance of the largest predator in our oceans would, however, cause major imbalances in the marine ecosystems that provide most of our oxygen. 

Gaëtan Gromer, in an artistic approach that questions the use we make of figures today, brings us face to face with an unknown reality. Using the astonishing power of suggestion of sound, coupled here with a visual representation that leaves no room for misinterpretation, the artist questions this very strange fish market.

NB: This work is part of the cycle Demain c’est loin, it can be exhibited with the four other creations: Printemps Silencieux, Scintillements, Unedo, Enapolis

With the support of our sponsor, DQE Software.

DQE Software – a software company specialising in the optimisation of customer data quality – and the artist, Gaëtan Gromer, use data in their work and believe in a smarter use of technology to improve our methods, increase our efficiency and limit our footprint on this world.

Credits

Art direction, design: Gaëtan Gromer

Manufacturing: Gaëtan Gromer, Nicolas Schneider, Léo Heitz

Electronics: Benoît Jester

Production: Les Ensembles 2.2 Les Ensembles 2.2

Property of DQE Software

Exhibited for the first time at Industrie Magnifique 2021

Permanent exhibition at the Maison de la Pêche et de la Nature in Levallois (92)

ENAPOLIS

2023-03-03T17:09:02+01:00

ENAPOLIS

Enapolis is a piece of work that reports the artist’s critical and worried look at the current evolution of urbanism in the face of climate catastrophes. It is inspired by ‘building worlds’, in which it would be possible to spend an entire life, from the maternity ward to the mortuary, without ever leaving.

The project in brief: 

Enapolis was inspired by the work of geonomist François Terrasson. In the 1980s he sought to answer the question: ‘Why does technological man destroy nature?’ ». His research, supported by dozens of collective experiences, led him to formulate a simple and clear answer to this question: ‘because he fears the wilderness’, a deep and largely unconscious fear. Man therefore logically protects himself from his fear by destroying its source. In Enapolis, we can literally measure the phenomenon. On the floor, the square of light highlights a concrete surface. The music (on headphones) is created from the sounds of jackhammers. With each sound impact, the equivalent of this area is artificially damaged in the world.

At the heart of the installation, two sculptures explore another way of protecting oneself from nature. They are inspired by recent ‘world building’ projects, in which it would be possible to spend a whole life, from the maternity ward to the mortuary, without ever leaving. For the designers, it is a question of perfectly controlling the environment of the inhabitants and envisaging a possible response today to the possible disaster that is coming. The irony of our species is that our fear leads us to make nature more and more threatening and thus to increase our impact and its potential consequences. A feedback loop that could generate others…

NB: This work is part of the cycle Demain c’est loin, it can be exhibited with the four other creations: Printemps Silencieux, Scintillements, Unedo, Sans faire de Vagues…

Credits

Artistic direction: Gaëtan Gromer

Technical director: Benoit Jester

Production : Les Ensembles 2.2

Co-production: L’Ososphère

Financial support : La Région Grand Est, le Centre National Cinématographique (CNC), Le Shadok

SCINTILLEMENTS

2023-03-03T17:08:34+01:00
SCINTILLEMENTS

In the darkness, LEDs flash.

An immersive sound environment lets you hear glaciers cracking and icebergs melting.

Can sound say something about the changing world?

The project in brief:

Scintillements is a sound journey to the heart of glaciers composed from recordings made by the artist at Jökulsarlòn at the foot of the Vatnajökull in Iceland and on various alpine glaciers (Glaciers of Glaciers, Tour and Girose).

The installation, which is also illuminated, causes a flash to appear each time the world’s glaciers permanently lose a volume of ice equivalent to the overall volume of the place in which the work is exhibited. 

The sound composition consists of the thuds produced when the seracs fall, the heavy cracking of the friction between the ice mass and the earth due to the movement of the glaciers, and the fizzing of the air bubbles released into the air under the water as the ice melts.

For this work, Gaëtan Gromer, whose most recent works make use of sonification* (Lorette, Enapolis), uses light this time to evoke the 23.45 million litres that glaciers lose every second.

NB: This work is part of the cycle Demain c’est loin, it can be exhibited with the four other creations: Unedo, Sans faire de vagues…, Enapolis, Printemps Silencieux

Credits

Artistic direction: Gaëtan Gromer

Technical director: Benoit Jester

Gaëtan Gromer was associate artist of the Espace Django in Strasbourg for the year 2019. The work was created within this framework.

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