LAT Press Support Contact

News

Attend the Augury: Hybrid Listening and Atmospheric Attunement exhibition performance by the Baltic-Nordic residency artist Juan Duarte Regino on Wednesday, June 14 at 18:00 the RIXC Gallery, Lencu iela 2!

Everyone is invited to a performance by Juan Duarte Regino and pizza at the RIXC Gallery from 18:00! Join the performance also online on Zoom HERE!

The artist will perform a sonic intervention using the installation Augury through real-time sensors outside the gallery sensing atmospheric registers, wind force, pressure and temperature to control a ritualistic divination of the surrounding weather. After performance there will be a talk about the project, and chance for questions and answers about the project. The artist will explore ancient meteorology and modern methods of weather sensing to extend our perception of atmospheric processes, based on ancient Greek-Roman and Aztec divination practices, symbols and methods of weather observation and prediction.

To sense atmospheric processes we can use our own body and technologies to translate their energies into human perception. This exhibition presents experiments with modern and ancient practices to sense and predict atmospheric processes, to perceive the intangible and contingent properties of the surrounding air.

Augury is the name of an ancient practice of divination based on observing birds' behavior to predict future events and make decisions. Their agency as a species with airborne capacity has been regarded in the past as messengers from beyond. Augury is used as the title of this media installation, which is inspired by some ancient methods for sensing and predicting the weather.

Hybrid Listening is a proposal to combine meteorological knowledge that reassures human sentience, and implement technical cognition systems for attuning and listening to our atmosphere. From ancient meteorology this exhibition looks into two cases of technologies for sensing and predicting atmospheric processes from a deep time perspective: The parapegmata and the obsidian mirror.

The parapegmata, an inscription surface to register and predict weather in relation to astronomical events, was used across ancient Greek-Roman cities to represent time cycles as sequences and combinatory events to forecast the weather. It was used to follow and guide the weather events, winds, festivals, appearances of birds, and the rising of rivers. In that sense, animal behavior and other natural phenomena were observed to indicate specific weather conditions linked to the movement of planets and stars.

The obsidian stones and mirror correspond to the Aztec myth of Tezcatlipoca (which means “smoking mirror”) a deity who was associated with the wind, the unconscious, and the art of divination. Looking and touching this obsidian mirror and stones is a way to perceive what is beyond our human capacities. In this case, to extend our listening beyond our body and through the sensing networks implemented in this installation.

Sensor data is obtained from outside the gallery, and it is used to drive an interactive composition that is transformed with an interface that resembles the Parapegmata and the smoking mirror to propose an alternative understanding of climate with contemporary technologies. In this sense, atmospheric processes are sensed within perceptual phenomena including wind direction, temperature, and electromagnetism.

Perceiving our atmosphere from divination means to contemplate our surroundings in search of answers to these questions: is connecting ancient and modern worldviews a way to look into the future, or a way to reveal, what is invisible here in our present moment?

Juan Duarte Regino is a Mexican artist based in Finland and doctoral researcher in Aalto University, who works with environmental sound to explore sensing in-between nature and technology. To create methods for augmented listening, and attunement to atmospheric processes that expand our human sensorium.

Credits:
Light artist: Anton Filatov
3D Renderings: Rodrigo Cid Velasco

 

The exhibition is on-view at the RIXC Gallery from May 26 to July 8, 2023.
Opening hours: RIXC Gallery, Lenču iela 2. Wednesday-Saturday, 12:00-18:00.

 

RIXC Center for New Media Culture has received mobility funding from the Nordic-Baltic Mobility Programme for Culture to establish RIXC Art Science Residencies.

Supported by the State Culture Capital Foundation of Latvia, Riga City Council.

RIXC Center for New Media Culture has received mobility funding from the Nordic-Baltic Mobility Programme for Culture to establish RIXC Art Science Residencies

CONTACTS

rixc@rixc.org

+371 67228478 (office)

+371 26546776 (Rasa Smite)