Presented in partnership with CAP UCLA, this pair of performances by artists William Basinski and Bethan Kellough sparks a powerful conversation between art and science.

In On Time, Out of Time, Basinki creates a one-of-a-kind sonic bed with recordings from the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) that captured billion-year-old sonic impressions made by two colliding black holes. Kellough’s Still the Fragments Move is a new composition that follows the journey of ocean waves from sea to shore. Both pieces explore the profound connection between sound, vibrations, and waveforms with the human body. 

The performance will be followed by a brief panel discussion with artists William Basinski, Evelina Domnitch, Dmitry Gelfand, and experimental physicist Rana Adhikari, about their time together at LIGO at Caltech in 2016 and the artwork that resulted from this fruitful collaboration.

Bethan Kellough

Hailing from Scotland, Bethan Kellough is an artist who incorporates strings, electronics and environmental sound recordings to produce immersive installations and compositions. Kellough employs a variety of recording techniques, including ambisonic microphones, hydrophones, electromagnetic and VLF (Very Low Frequency) receivers, to capture the vibrations and spatial nuances of the natural world. Her debut release, Aven was named as one of the top 20 avant albums by Rolling Stone in 2016.

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William Basinski

William Basinski is a Los Angeles–based avant-garde composer and sound artist renowned for his pioneering work in ambient music, soundscapes, and tape-loop compositions. Born in 1958, he has spent decades exploring the ephemeral nature of sound, memory, and decay. Basinski’s most acclaimed project, The Disintegration Loops (2002–03), is a four-album series that captures the sounds of magnetic tape loops deteriorating as they are played again and again; Basinski conceived the work as an elegiac response to the events of September 11, 2001.

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Directed by Lauren Bon and realized in collaboration with field recordist Ian Wellman and filmmaker Maurício Chades, The Great Vibration (2023) is an exploration of how percussive force transforms stagnant energies. Using analog field recordings captured during the building of a well, which involved hammering sixty-foot shoring panels into a section of the concretized Los Angeles River adjacent to the artist’s studio, the video both documents a construction process and conveys the magnitude of raw power involved in transforming the site. The result is an immersive soundscape that transitions from foreboding and violent to meditative and ecstatic.

Lauren Bon and Metabolic Studio

Lauren Bon, a Los Angeles–based environmental artist, is the driving force behind the Metabolic Studio, which focuses on developing self-sustaining and diversifying systems of exchange, including a unique sonic practice, that rejuvenate the ecological web. Since Not a Cornfield in 2005, Bon has been involved in transmission art, notably with locations along the Los Angeles River’s cyborg watershed. Her work highlights the role of vibration in activating living systems, exploring how sonic frequencies can impact ecological health.

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Metabolic Studio

For Bone meets blade, sonified calling out. who what will utter back (2023), Jeneen Frei Njootli “sonified” the process of making a traditional hunting instrument out of a caribou shoulder bone. With the use of a Dremel grinder and a single-beam headlamp, Frei Njootli modified the bone’s central ridge while contact microphones, distortion pedals, and an electric guitar amplifier magnified the sounds of their craftsmanship—that is, the instrument’s becoming.

Jeneen Frei Njootli

Working in their home territory of Old Crow, Yukon, Jeneen Frei Njootli is a two-spirit/queer artist whose practice engages sculpture, performance, music, textile design, and feral scholarship. Through public sound and performance works, they create intimate and embodied experiences related to ancestry, cultural heritage, and the land and its human and nonhuman inhabitants.

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