Five-Hundred Twenty-Four

2022 - Film & Video (Film & Video)

26:46 minutes

Lenka Clayton and Phillip Andrew Lewis


Five Hundred Twenty-Four, a single-channel video installation by Lenka Clayton and Phillip Andrew Lewis, features singers from over twenty Cleveland-area choirs counting numbers in an iterative process: one person sings “one”, then two people sing “two”, and so forth, to 524. Each choir was filmed separately, and the artists weave together the audio while the video features each choir individually. The juxtaposition of different contexts in which singing occurs functions as an embedded sociological study of various communities throughout the region. As artists living in Pittsburgh, PA, Clayton and Lewis have long worked in their individual and joint practices with particular communities. Here, they were inspired by the statistic that one in five US households includes someone who is part of a choir. As basic human forms, both singing and counting are ways to explore our tenuous connections to others and learn new ways of being together in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. This work marks the formation and dissipation of a new group made up of pre-existing groups who usually operate separately behind closed doors in different corners of the region. Although the singers may have not been all in the same room, they become one collective musical body through the artists’ digital efforts—a way of fostering community many have become comfortable with through the COVID-19 pandemic. While the piece is sung with a collective voice, every individual is uniquely tasked to begin and end counting at their specific number. The score is a roll call, an audit, a measurement performed by the measured. The work takes on wider relevance as a mobilization of disparate communities amid a time of social fragmentation in the USA. Concluding with a threshold choir who sing the final numbers of the sequence, the work speaks to larger cycles of life, death, and renewal.


Lenka Clayton and Phillip Andrew Lewis’s collaborative practice is social at its core: it engages with and connects communities outside of the so-called art world in both production and presentation. This is evident in their works across media; the artworks themselves emerge as literal and figurative gathering places. Lenka Clayton is an interdisciplinary artist whose work considers, exaggerates, and alters the accepted rules of everyday life, extending the familiar into the realms of the poetic and absurd. In previous works, she has searched for and photographed every person mentioned by name in a German newspaper; worked with artists who identify as blind to recreate Brancusi’s Sculpture for the Blind from a spoken description; and reconstituted a lost museum from a sketch found in an archive. Clayton is the founder of An Artist Residency in Motherhood, a self-directed, open-source artist residency program that takes place inside the homes and lives of artists who are also parents. There are currently over 1,000 artists-in-residence in 62 countries. Phillip Andrew Lewis is an artist working in a variety of media including photography, video, objects, and sound. His creative research often responds to historical events, psychology, and phenomenology. This work consistently examines duration, perceptual limits and attentive observation. Lewis is actively involved in collaboration with artists and various groups.


Colors:



Related works sharing similar palette  
» see more

Royal Velázquez Portrait Expected to Shatter Auction Records
© » OBSERVER

Royal Velázquez Portrait Expected to Shatter Auction Records | Observer A portrait of a Spanish queen painted by Diego Velázquez, the 17th-century artist celebrated for his depictions of Spain’s royal family, is expected to shatter his auction record when it goes up for sale early next year...

5
© » KADIST

Jiang Zhi

2012

5 is a three channel video about the dualities of death and resurrection, reminiscence and fantasy, chronological and retrospective narration...

The Trafficking Of Looted Syrian Art Is Helping Finance ISIS
© » ARTSJOURNAL

Stolen Syrian art funds international terrorism – Why aren’t we talking about it? – Annenberg Media Skip to main content Arts, Culture & Entertainment Stolen Syrian art funds international terrorism – Why aren’t we talking about it? Stories about the trafficking of blood antiquities across an international black market don’t often appear in the average person’s news diet; Stories about the terrorist organizations that these antiquity sales fund do, though...

UK Museums Banned From Imposing Reproduction Fees After 70 Years
© » ARTLYST

In a groundbreaking verdict, the Court of Appeal has ushered in a significant transformation in the practices of UK museums concerning charging fees for reproducing historic artworks...

Related works found in the same semantic group  
» see more

Night of Ideas: KADIST presents Lenka Clayton & Phillip Andrew Lewis’ 'Five Hundred Twenty-Four' (2022)
© » KADIST

Night of Ideas: KADIST presents Lenka Clayton & Phillip Andrew Lewis’ Five Hundred Twenty-Four (2022) Night of Ideas is a global marathon of philosophical debates and artistic performances coordinated by the French Institute Paris and Villa Albertine in the United States, taking place in more than 50 cities in the United States in 2023 and +100 countries around the world...

Full Hungarian splendour: Treble Voices Festival 2019
© » ARTS EQUATOR

Full Hungarian splendour: Treble Voices Festival 2019 | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia Articles Courtesy of Choral Moments/Kims Production...

ONE MILLION (Japanese Yen)
© » KADIST

Kwan Sheung Chi

2012

Kwan Sheung Chi’s work One Million is a video work depicting the counting of bills...

Metal: An Improbable Alchemy of Dance And Heavy Metal
© » ARTS EQUATOR

Metal: An Improbable Alchemy of Dance And Heavy Metal | ArtsEquator Thinking and Talking about Arts and Culture in Southeast Asia ArtsEquator Viewpoints Gregory Lorenzutti February 28, 2020 The following review is made possible through a Critical Residency programme supported by By Carolyn Oei (762 words, 5-minute read) I am not a fan of heavy metal music – or heavy metal anything – so I took my seat in the Playhouse, Arts Centre Melbourne, with trepidation...