…where sound is transformed into shape
J. L. Borges
Vladimir Tarasov’s ‘Sound Games’ are filled with universal meanings and images. It contains within itself a specific
visual-acoustic ‘text’ of contemporary culture, pulsing and flickering, independent of the momentary present. The four installations’ dramatic makeup is pierced by the whole history of civilization and directed at its sources — the earliest sonic structures, rhythmically discovered by mankind. The visual structures bring forth not only the artist’s personal exceptionality, but also his work’s internal connection with the traditions and strategies of
avant-garde culture.
Steeped in the archaic settlements of Absheron, the installation ‘Gobustan’ opens up a majestic world of primordial sounds — man’s first rhythmic contact with the reality of planet Earth. Anton Webern,
Karl-Heinz Stockhausen, Steve Reich, and John Cage’s future acoustic compositions are hidden in distinct sounds, in their harmonic proportions, durations and magical lengths, ‘played’ on a shaman’s special stone — primitive man’s first musical instrument.
Through glancing into the past and experiencing its reconstruction in tangible personal impressions, Vladimir Tarasov returns to contemporary culture its canonical figurativeness, fundamental archetypes in which coded reality is revealed. This future always begins with an immersion in personal memory. The artist testifies to the force of our desire to reach that place where we can concentrate on the ideal, its centring in the phenomenon of childhood and the light forms that trigger human memory. Their locality, mystery and charm lie concealed in the northern coastland, in that sublime childhood feeling of connection with nature and its sounds — nocturnal stirrings in the forest, birdsong and grandma’s voice ‘telling’ ancient history — the old Russian song, northern folklore genuine in its candour. The sound of the samovar, a true sense of calm, the measured tones of the human voice and the protective gesture of the surrounding world created a unique environment for the birth of those invigorating, rhythmically repetitive processes of the soul that were later reflected in the celebrated ‘Chushala’ installation. The visual and acoustic spaces of ‘Chushala’ are entirely iconological and alive within them we perceive the traditions of transition from an archaic world to the radical ‘garden of magnitude’ of the present day. Fluctuating in the organics of the installation are those decisive impulses that throughout our history and unbeknown to us have led to what we now are, preserving our
non-linear equilibrium.
Their plastic meanings can discover this equilibrium in the fluxus strategy, as they do in the installation ‘In Between’ — in a dialogue with a technological artifact (a steamboat engine), rhyming its rhythmic contours with the handmade sound of the wonderful American bassist Mark Dresser.
The magic of the space that appears through the revolving wheel of the steamship, this nostalgic image of a vanishing civilisation, an image connected to the natural quality of water and augmented by the propulsive sound of Mark Dresser's double bass. All this produces a special dramaturgy of unique harmony, a taut yet absolutely transparent
visual-acoustic fabric infused with art.
‘Sound Games’ contains a paradoxical cyclicity within itself, demanding constant return to the Dionysian conditions of culture, to the piercing immediacy of the utterance, rhythmically altering the motifs of ebb and flow, forming the ‘breath’ of art. Its final phase, ‘The Sixties’, in presenting itself as a poppy field, a depth of reddening plasmic states, immerses the viewer into a flickering foliation of a sensory space, into unique meditative energy, where legendary figures of the
1960s — Miles Davis, Glenn Gould, John Coltrane, Ravi Shankar, Jimi Hendrix — hold sway. Grouped together in one horizontal line, in one mythologem of the
1960s ‘new wave’, they free contemporary culture’s doubting ‘reason’ from rational computer systems, destroying the pretentious rules of the virtual world. Their faces, lit up with a
rock-and-roll poppy glow, intoxicated by the total freedom of the creative act, turn towards the first decade of a new century, fully revealing their own great dramatic existence, in the depths of which lives a feeling of
all-encompassing love. Its
self-evidence, its great principles of concord sound in the line taken by Tarasov for the epigraph to ‘Sound Games’ from the French poet Armand: ‘I spread out as a spacious poppy field, to make you scatter and fall into the grass’.
Vitaly Patsukov