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Lawrence Abu Hamdan: The all Hearing
20August
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Lawrence Abu Hamdan: The all Hearing

Laveronica Arte Contemporanea presents 'The All Hearing', the first solo exhibition in Italy by Lawrence Abu Hamdan (b,1985, Amman), curated by Robert Leckie.

 

The artist explores the politics of listening through sound, video, sculpture, performance and installation. Recent works include a trilogy of audio essays that addresses the role of the voice in law, an installation about emergent technologies of audio-surveillance and a map that illustrates the compound genealogies of Somali accents. Insisting on voices as 'questionable objects', Abu Hamdan's practice probes the ways in which words and how they are said are subject to scrutiny, bureaucracy and injustice at the hands of the state and unpacks the often muddy relationships amongst listening, politics, borders, human rights, testimony and truth.

 

Abu Hamdan's exhibition at Laveronica is a presentation of his body of work titled Tape Echo, a recent body of work made in Cairo, in which second hand islamic cassette taped sermons – in the city – are the primary medium and object of inquiry. The cassette tape recording Gardens of Death, for example, captures the acoustic bleed between the dozens of open-topped party boats that line both sides of the river Nile. Made by steering a small motor boat, microphone in hand, along the shore, the work documents the arrhythmic cacophony that resonates out across the river from these ungovernably loud, competing loudspeaker jurisdictions. Presented on a type of light-projecting speakers that are a common sight in Cairo's streets and clubs, this work mimics the 'loudspeaker libertarianism' adopted by locals wishing to drown out the deafening din while also contributing to it.

 

The video The All Hearing shows two local sheikhs delivering sermons on noise pollution in Cairo at the artist's request. This unorthodox intervention into the sonic landscape of the 'loudest city on Earth' followed on from the military regime's attempts to restrict such sermons to government-sanctioned topics (that week, the Prophet's Ascension to Heaven). Cutting between close-ups of the sheikhs' idiosyncratic addresses and wide shots of their congregations and the loudspeakers amplifying their voices in the streets outside, Abu Hamdan's images show how the sheikhs' message is disseminated in a way that contradicts its content. Likewise, towards the end of the video, a stack of speakers like those in Gardens of Death blurts out the highly appropriate lyrics to Shehta Karika's 'Miracle Alley' at full volume, over an infectious beat: 'Keep it down, man. Quiet, guys! Keep it down, woman, and go inside. Keep it down, keep it quiet. I could use some peace and quiet...'

 

A Conversation with an Unemployed comprises a series of blown-up images of the magnetic strips of second-hand cassette tapes bought from Cairo's Friday market. These tapes have had sermons recorded onto them, erased, then re-recorded over many times throughout their lives, leaving sonic remnants that have accumulated significantly over the years. Presented on bespoke light boxes, these remnants are now visible as gaps, crevices and ravines on the tape's surface, providing distinct sonic fingerprints of Cairo's audio culture.

 

Part of this culture is described in further detail in the final work in the exhibition, the voiceover-led audio work The End of Every Illusionist, presented on a tape-echo machine in the main gallery. The title derives from the original cassette tape sermon that Abu Hamdan's commentary now overlays. His words address, in a physiological vernacular that appears to liken noise to an airborne infection and the body to an instrument, the common health issues caused by Cairo's debilitating loudness. The sounds of the city penetrate the flesh, the body falls ill, amplified sermons – described as an 'ethical enema for the ear canals' – only exacerbate the issue, while overdubbed cassette tapes suffer memory loss.

 

Artists:

 

Lawrence Abu Hamdan

 

Close: Saturday, 31 October 2015

 

Address: Via Clemente Grimaldi, 93, 97015 Modica RG

 

Mail: info@gallerialaveronica.it

 

Phone: +39 09321873100

 

Web: Laveronica Arte Contemporanea

 

Opening hour: Tue – Sat | 10am – 1pm and 3pm – 8pm

 

Closing day: Sun – Mon

 

Admission: Free