Essayer OR - Gratuit
Trunk call Artist who spent a year listening to a tree
The Guardian Weekly
|May 09, 2025
Joshua Bonnetta recorded a pine for 8,760 hours- then honed it down into an album full of creatures and creaking branches
What does a landscape sound like when it's not being listened to? This philosophical question was a catalyst for film-maker and artist Joshua Bonnetta, who has distilled a year of recordings from a single tree in upstate New York - that's 8,760 hours - into a four-hour album, The Pines.
As Robert Macfarlane writes in his accompany-ing essay, The Pines is a reminder of the natural world's "sheer, miraculous busyness", its "froth of signals and noise". It is rich with poetic mean-ing, and resonant amid the climate emergency.
"It started as a personal thing," Bonnetta explains from his studio in Munich, where he relocated from the US in 2022. For over 20 years he has made sonic records of places as private mementos, but recent experiments with long-form field recording led him to push himself "to document this place in the deepest way I could". On a residency in the Outer Hebrides between 2017 and 2019, Bonnetta made the sound instal-lation Brackish, a month-long continuous radio broadcast from a weather-resistant hydrophone - an underwater mic - by a loch. "I started to leave the recorder for a day or two, then it just got longer," he says. "Amazing things happen when you're not there to interfere ... This allows you a different, very privileged window into the space."
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition May 09, 2025 de The Guardian Weekly.
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