BERLIN.- The Gropius Bau presents world-renowned artist Wu Tsangs Of Whales (2022), a large-scale installation accessible free of charge in the institutions historic atrium.
Of Whales is derived from Tsangs multidisciplinary research around Herman Melvilles novel Moby Dick (1851). In the installation first presented at the 59th Venice Biennale (2022) surreal ocean environments are dynamically regenerated in real time by a virtual reality game engine. A 16-channel score blends horns, saxophone, clarinet and contrabass, unleashing a soundscape that fills the entire space. The musical compositions invite viewers to meditate on their kinship with aquatic species and states of natural flux.
As the Gropius Baus inaugural Artist in Residence, Wu Tsang was the first artist to move into a studio on-site in 2018. Her exhibition There is no nonviolent way to look at somebody (20192020) collated documentary film, photography, sculpture and choreography to consider the politics of migration and displacement within the crux of image-making. The link between space, politics and bodies has remained a touchstone of the Gropius Baus programming ever since.
Of Whales forms part of a filmic trilogy that includes Tsangs feature-length adaptation of Moby Dick, the story of a captains obsessive quest for the eponymous white whale. Today, the novel can be read in the context of research on transatlantic enslavement, subversive maritime history and cross-species relations. Of Whales takes a different approach by imagining the story from below the surface of the ocean. Through musical collaboration and real-time technology, the work creates a poetic meditation on the whales perspective through a deep dive into an aquatic environment that alludes to Melvilles tale. Tsangs installation mirrors the spiraling narrative structure of Moby Dick in a cyclical movement between cosmos and the surface. Sonically, the whales calls and whistles, combined with the works ever-shifting reflections, point to a world beyond anthropocentrism, just as the sonic frequencies of whales operate beyond the limits of human perception.