Susan Philipsz: A Single Voice – sci-fi sound and emotional mystery

Baltic, Gateshead
The Turner prize-winner’s hypnotic new installation uses a camera, a violinist and a series of speakers to shed a wondrous light on music’s science and sorcery

What a miraculous thing art is. Just when you thought you knew what it was, it becomes something else. Perhaps transformation itself is the essence of art – or perhaps it has no essence at all, but is simply a name we give to whatever heightens life and reveals its beauty. Apologies for these wandering thoughts but the work of Susan Philipsz induces contemplation and reverie, provoking the mind as it enthrals the soul.

A Single Voice is her most obviously art-like work of art yet, in that it gives you a film to look at. Philipsz won the 2010 Turner prize with a room that was empty except for sound, and her work is primarily aural, even if her recent Tate Britain installation remembering the first world war did feature a collection of battered musical instruments.

At Baltic she shows her film of violinist Leila Akhmetova playing, and waiting to play, alone in a studio. A camera mounted on a circular dolly track pans endlessly and restlessly around Akhmetova, closing in as she studies the score on a computer screen, panning away to see her sitting upright playing a prolonged note. It is a compelling, hypnotic study of an orchestral musician taken out of the orchestra, playing alone with strange dignity and wondrous discipline, as the camera silently watches.

There I go again – feasting on the visual. A nice motion picture to look at. The film Philipsz has made is alluring, projected on a huge screen in a vast darkened hangar of a space. Yet it is perhaps not the real artwork at all. The heart of her installation is the sound that moves between isolated speakers placed along two sides of the long, post-industrial gallery. As Akhmetova waits to play her part, rich or shrill string notes are heard from different parts of the shadowy cavernous gallery. Then she raises her bow, and as she brings it down you recognise her note streaming from her speaker.

As the sound builds up, you are drawn from speaker to speaker, pacing around the installation even as the camera pans around the violinist. The film can be watched from both sides of the screen, making it even more entrancing to move through a space that starts to feel increasingly solid and substantial as it fills, bit by bit, with sound.

Science has recently entered the age of gravitational waves, as the latest astrophysics proves Einstein’s century-old theory of space-time. Philipsz too is Einsteinian, it strikes me, as the air vibrates to lonely notes. Sound is a wave in space. Philipsz uses that physical fact to sculpt the very air we breathe. A Single Voice seems to isolate soundwaves and make you feel their reality in space-time.

If that seems like science fiction, it is science fiction that has inspired this work. A Single Voice uses the score of Aniara, a 1959 modernist composition by Karl-Birger Blomdahl based on an epic poem by Harry Martinson about a group of would-be colonists of Mars who get stranded in space. The desolate notes of the violin, keening from one speaker to another, represent the doomed astronauts’ soliloquies as they drift in the vacuum.

Yet it is not the narrative of astral travel that makes this work of art so powerful as the tension it creates between sound and vision. Music, it makes you realise, goes straight inside us in a way that images cannot. Looking at Akhmetova on screen, we see her from the outside. The camera almost voyeuristically studies her face and body as she sits attentively and plays her part. Yet while the eye scrutinises, the ear empathises. The music seems a direct unmediated link between souls.

In a darkened chamber at the end of the gallery, Philipsz sings alone. She is giving her rendition of every song on David Bowie’s The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars. Not only does this earlier work (recorded in 2001) fit nicely with the sci-fi theme but once again it makes you feel the emotional mystery of music. Here is a fan offering her homage to Bowie, sending a message across the stars to him. It also reaches you, standing in the shadows, absorbed by this strangely intimate work. If Earth was really dying and we had five years left to live, you could do a lot worse than spend some of that time with this visionary artist.

Contributor

Jonathan Jones

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Sound artist Susan Philipsz puts the FBI under surveillance

The 'Karl Marx of music' was banned by the Nazis, tapped by the FBI and wrote scores for Charlie Chaplin. In her first major show in Berlin, the Turner prize-winner explores Hanns Eisler's life, times and suspected crimes, writes Adrian Searle

Adrian Searle

26, Feb, 2014 @3:23 PM

Article image
Turner prize: Susan Philipsz may be a worthy winner, but don't call her a sound artist | Jonathan Jones
Jonathan Jones: 'Sound art' doesn't really exist. One of the great things about the Turner prize is that it rewards work in many different forms

Jonathan Jones

07, Dec, 2010 @11:47 AM

Article image
Dalí, Duchamp, Basquiat and beards: the best art of autumn 2017
Modigliani seduces, the Turner hits Hull, Rebecca Warren shakes up St Ives – and Gilbert and George have a close shave with facial hair – we pick the season’s most eye-popping art exhibitions

Jonathan Jones

18, Sep, 2017 @5:00 AM

Article image
Susan Philipsz guns for glory at Edinburgh festival – the week in art

Jonathan Jones: The Turner prizewinner's voice will ring out across the city in response to Edinburgh Castle's One O'Clock Gun. And did we heed Martin Creed's Olympic bell-ringing cry? – all in today's weekly art dispatch

Jonathan Jones

27, Jul, 2012 @11:55 AM

Article image
Susan Philipsz: Lament for a drowned love
Why has this woman chosen to perform a sad song from the 16th century beneath the bridges of Glasgow? By Charlotte Higgins

Charlotte Higgins

04, Apr, 2010 @9:00 PM

Article image
Susan Philipsz: Sonic boom

Susan Philipsz has won the Turner prize – using just her own voice. So was her night marred by the student protests? How did she get into sound art? And what's this about a run-in with Stephen Fry? She talks to Charlotte Higgins

Charlotte Higgins

07, Dec, 2010 @9:30 PM

Article image
Turner prize 2010: Susan Philipsz, sound art and student protests
Last night Susan Philipsz walked away with Britain’s biggest contemporary art prize, but the evening was dominated by art students demonstrating against cuts. Here’s how events unfolded

Andrew Dickson and Shehani Fernando

07, Dec, 2010 @8:54 AM

Article image
Monica Bonvicini review – S&M gear has kinks ironed out
Between the power drills, leather tassels and saucy builders’ humour, Italian artist Monica Bonvicini lets S&M hang heavy in the air. But the audience frustratingly ends up neither master nor slave

Adrian Searle

21, Nov, 2016 @3:59 PM

Article image
Pubs, K-pop and Wilfred Owen: Baltic Artists’ award 2019 review
Baltic, Gateshead
The winners of the prize for up-and-coming artists – Ingrid Pollard, Kang Jungsuck and Aaron Hughes – take on war, racism and reality itself

Hannah Clugston

19, Feb, 2019 @4:05 PM

Article image
Michael Rakowitz review – a new hanging garden of hope and yearning
The Iraqi-American’s intricately-labelled planters and models form a repository for stories on everything from the destruction of Palestinian olives to homesick migrants

Adrian Searle

20, Jul, 2023 @2:28 PM