...to my webside. My name is Lynn Pia Pook and I'm an artist. You're
in the right place if you want to contact
me, or if you're interested in my CV.
Below you'll find a list of all my projects. Enjoy looking around!
HELLO, I'M ACTUALY WORKING ON THE ACTUALISATION
OF MY WEBSIDE, SO EXCUSE THE STRANGE THINGS AND MISTAKES YOU
COULD DISCOVER AND ENJOY THE FIRST STEPS OF THE ENGLISH VERSION!
Lynn
Coming soon
19-22 + 27-30 April 2007 : "P a u s e" at the Donaufestival
in Krems (AU).
P a u s e
(Karlsruhe, 2005)
A curious patterning, Pause is a set of intimate and contrasting
sensations. It produces a reconsideration of the living body and,
on a larger level, a reflection upon sonic and tactile distortion.
Thus it brings forth a desire to explore a kind of perceptive airlock,
of whether it is hearing and touch which are somehow hesitant,
or whether the matter is dual. This duality, which perturbs the
sensory organs, gives rise to an extra aspect of perception in
the body, in which a normal sense of reality is lost to the skin
and the ear and seems no longer to be fixed.
Sound installation for 14 contact loudspeakers and 14-channel audiosystem.
Raplapa #01 was realised for the 2004 Kryptonale Festival, in
Berlin and was presented in the Großer Wasserspeicher (Am
Wasserturm, Prenzlauerberg) as part of the site-specific installation
called
Wipp Lounge.
Raplapa is a term in the French colloquial language, referring both
to physical flatness and to physical and emotional exhaustion. This
sound installation brings about a perception of sound different
from what is generally experienced. The participient is requested
to lie in a hammock, wired in such a way as to make sounds resonate
throughout his or her entire body.
Fourteen loudspeakers are positioned in the hammock, touching different
parts of the extended body. In this way, the vibrations from the
loudspeakers become manifest and the sounds are carried, via the
bones, to the inner ear. Our most intimate space becomes a resonance
body and a changing sound sculpture.
To our ears, this inner soundspace becomes linked to the sounds
produced in the water tower. In contrast to the passive reception
and perception of the soundspace in the hammock, the architectonic
body of the watertower offers a space in which the participent has
the opportunity to alter his or her viewpoint, so as to realise
his or her own experience of the sounds. These two diametrically
opposed soundspaces have also been used by composers Paul Modler,
Henry Mex and David Monarcchi in their own 26-channel site-specific
works.
Sound installation for 16 contact loudspeakers and 16-channel audiosystem.
This object is not designed to be looked at, rather to be felt
and heard. The guest is fitted with earplugs, so as not to heard
extraneous noises. Sixteen loudspeakers, without membranes, are
attached to the body and then proceed to play a ten minute composition.
S/he feels vibrations on the body and hears sounds coming from within.
The installation uses contact loudspeakers which, in contrast to
regular loudspeakers, which are barely audible, vibrate strongly.
They first become audible when attached to a resonance body. In
this case, that is the body of the recipient. The sounds are carried
by the bones to the inner ear. The multichannel composition means
that the sounds and the vibrations which they produce are heard
to be moving throughout the body.
Videoinstallation
"Kunst am Bau" award from the company tecmath in Kaiserslautern
(D)
Two long objects made out of floral blankets lie around the
atrium of the second and third floor of a company building.
Televisions are wrapped in blankets, their screens showing
a sleeping woman and a sleeping man. Occasionaly the sleepers
move and change their position.
Video installation, Berlin, 2001, cardboard 50x80x170 cm, Monitor,
DVD Player
A big monitor is hidden under a long cardboard tunnel, so that the
visitor has to squat down, to be able to see it. On the monitor, a nude
person is visible. The person is locked up in a long narrow room and
explores the room she is in and the border to the room in front. Driven
by curiosity, both seem to look at each other. Through the reduction of
the room to the single object and the analogous posture a strong attention
is created in the viewer, wich equals an intimate situation. The video
takes up the role of a distorted mirror, which reflects the behaviour of
the recipient.
I take my clothes off and on. My body is nude, but my trunk is not
visible. Its in between, in the empty space between the two
monitors. On the upper monitor only my head and the shoulders are
visible, on the lower monitor only my legs are visible, from the
knees down. The space between is open to the imagination. My gaze
interrogates the gaze of the viewer opposite.
Its a game played with the viewer, its about display
and observation, about the exhibitionist and the voyeuristic aspects
of the relationship between artist and recipient.
When words fail, when communication goes awry or when you just
lose the thread, you’re simply there, wanting to disappear. I clumsily
play four characters with my fingers: a sexy woman, a timid woman,
an old person and a drunk, who all walk disconsolately through a
blanket-landscape.
This performance, inspired by the observation that we spend most
of our time sitting, formed part of a larger project called "...sind
im Park", realized in a public park in Berlin-Pankow.
Five chairs of different sizes (25 cm to 2.30 m) and some short
texts I had written about the act of sitting were the material of
the performance. I recorded myself, speaking the texts. Another
element I used was radio. A second person controlled the sound.
As with the children's game of "Musical Chairs", while
the radio was on I moved and danced around; when the music was stopped,
I ran to the next smallest chair and sat on it, whilst a text is
played. When the radio starts again I stand up and move again, taking
the chair witrh me. Little by little it becomes more difficult for
me to move, since I am carrying more and more chairs with me. At
the end I build a big tower with all the chair. while a text I wrote
at the start of the war in Iraq is played. In this text I try to
describe my incomprehension at the stupidity of this war, which
I was barely able to follow sitting in front of a lying TV.
Two hundred hollow plaster eggs are scattered over the room. Their
diameter
is between 15 and 35 cm. Six small speakers are hidden behind them.
From different directions male and female voices in english or czech
are heard, requesting or forbidding the touching of the objects by the
audience - they whisper, threaten, shout, order, implore.The plaster eggs,
perfect and fragile, fascinate and encourage touching,
while liable to be crushed.Thus the eggs are gradually broken by the visitors.
This sound installation was created in cooperation with Lina Faller
(eggs), during the festival VIOlens in Tabor (CZ).
Installation with sound in collaboration with Lina Faller.
Like in a shooting gallery, members of the public were able to
shoot at plaster-eggs with plastic pistols. Small holes appeared
until, finally, the object collapsed. A four-channel composition
lends the piece a fairground atmosphere.
A raised hide-out allows a hunter an enlarged view on the surrounding
landscape. But what happens if a blind person climbs up into it?
With a video camera in my hands, pointed at my face, I climb with
closed eyes up into the raised hide-out and listen to the landscape.
Three people are dressed in full-body suits, made out of white plastic
bags glued together, so that the bags are open at the front and can be
used as containers. On a vast snow-covered field, the performers use
soup spoons to collect snow with which they fill the plastic bags.
Foam object with wood structure, Hight: 2,30 m, Arm length: 6 m.
A monstrous, doll-like figure with exaggerated arms reaching
out into the room, invites the viewer to an embrace. This gesture
appears protecting and crushing at the same time.
fabric objects, needle, red marker, meathook, lifesize.
The empty encasements have been created directly from the bodies
of five people. The suits fit the bodies so precisely, that they
impede every movement made by the person.
The exhibition space of Galerie Pankow was measured and their dimensions
translated onto a 158 sq m (scale 1:1) wooden platform situated
in the Pankow public park, between a café, open spaces and rosegardens.
This "open-air" Galerie Pankow had no walls, two large trees offering
protection from the sun and bad weather. The "Gallery in the Park"
remained available around the clock. During five weeks this "open-air"
galerie has been used by different artist.
As part of the Heinrich von Kleist Festival in Frankfurt/Oder,
Grit Steckmann, Susanne Weck and I daily took part in poetic interventions
in Polish and German in the city center and suburbs of Frankfurt/Oder.
A piece which confronts
the dreamer with the gulf between reality and the truth experienced
within dreams. Video and puppets together
combine to produce an almost exclusively visual drama, full of
memorable and artistic images.
Child on the High Seas (2001)
Puppet Theater Project with "Tram-Theater"
After a short story by Jules Supervielle.
All alone in a town in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean there lives
a twelve-year-old girl. This town is not shown on any map
and no-one has ever seen it. As soon as a ship comes near,
the girl falls into a deep sleep and the town disappears into
the sea....