Cross
Boundaries
Michael
Bashaw, Sound Chamber
Troy, Ohio
By Elizabeth Broadrup
To commemorate it's 75th anniversary the Hobart
Brothers Company commissioned a participatory sound piece for
it's welded metal sculpture park in Troy, Ohio. Sculptor / musician
Michael Bashaw created Sound Chamber in five months, with the
help of Hobart engineers and welders. He modeled the $50,000
work on the geometric bamboo and tyvek paper structure he built
at Paul Winter's Living Music Village in Connecticut in 1989.
Bashaw explains that the structure, a "hybrid
of cultures," is related visually to pagodas and conceptually
to ceremonial drum huts (Sopo Gandag)of the Mandailing people
of North Sumatra.
Sound Chamber, 1992
Carbon steel and musical instuments, 21' x 50' x 50' ft.
Visitors to Sound Chamber animate drum gongs and
kalimbas with their hands; they use mallets and sticks to draw
music from tone rods, musical rasps and mbira ("tongues"),
flat steel strips clamped to a resonating surface. A tide of
3,800 ball bearings rolling within an ocean drum adds to the
percussive symphony. Bashaw intends the sculpture to bring people
together, "celebrating the communal spirit in sound."
Concerned about the work's proximity to residences,
he softened volume and tuned the instruments to a melodic five-tone
scale. Since Bashaw and his emsemble demonstrated the work's
musical potential in a dedication concert, it has attracted
neighborhood residents daily. Even wiyhout visitors, Sound Chamber's
four wind harps and 360 chimes swtill emit an "unearthly"
music in the presence of wind.
From Sculpture Magazine-September
/ October 1992
Source: http://www.puzzleoflight.com/sculpmag.html
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