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Art Installation offers Unflinching Take on Classical Music’s Imperial Entanglements

Colin Tucker Studio

4106-181 Dundas Street East

Toronto, ON, M5A 0N5

716-335-5308

ColinLTucker@gmail.com

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

spectatorship is not neutral

site-specific interventions for concert halls by Colin Tucker

Canadian Music Centre–Ontario

20 St. Joseph St., Toronto/Tkaronto/Dish with One Spoon Treaty Territory

April 23-26 and April 29-May 3

Open 10am-3pm daily

Toronto/Tkaronto— This spring, the Canadian Music Centre–Ontario presents spectatorship is not neutral, an installation featuring new and recent works for concert halls by Colin Tucker. The project focuses on marking the politics of often unmarked defaults of spectatorial concert (“classical”) music, particularly those of silent, seated, focal listening, and of organizing musical practice around closed, immaterial works. 

Grounded in methods of Black and Indigenous studies, the installation investigates how the concert hall’s central position, the Spectator, is always already relational, and specifically how the Spectator’s sensory capacity depends axiomatically upon the displacement of the exteriority of sensation onto racially-marked figures of sensory incapacity. The featured works map how seemingly routine protocols of concert music are not easily separable from protocols of empire, as a necessary step towards a politicized dismantling of concert music. As the artist is read as white, the installation deliberately limits the scope of its critical inquiry to white positionality, while prioritizing methods of interrogating whiteness learned from Indigenous and Black studies.

Featuring works for print, images, audio, projection, piano, and more, the program features installations throughout the Canadian Music Center’s Chalmers House space in Tkaronto/Toronto, as well as a related live-streamed artist talk and performance (see details below).

For more information: https://colintucker.studio/events/not-neutral/

partial mockup of installation

For details about the featured pieces: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1rg_YUWZ0gj59rF0c_NzPHkZJlIkA6dxXlV7qc4Ofag0/edit?usp=sharing

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Artist Biography

Colin Tucker is an artist and curator who investigates intersections between experimental music, contemporary art, anti-racism, and anti-colonialism. As an artist, Colin makes critical investigations of sensory politics in the concert hall, and of (settler) colonial grammars of territorial possession, through scores/instructions, videos, installations, and artist books. Colin’s works have been presented at Bemis Center for Contemporary Art, Darmstadt Ferienkurse für Neue Musik, Eastman School of Music, Issue Project Room, June in Buffalo, Kleinhans Music Hall (Buffalo Philharmonic), MidAmerican Center for Contemporary Music, New England Conservatory, Slingshot Festival, and Center for Computer Research in Music and Acoustics—Stanford University, performed by the symphony orchestras of Detroit and Ann Arbor, ensembles dal niente, East Coast Contemporary Ensemble (ECCE), ELISION, Linea, S.E.M., soundinitiative, Surplus, and Uusinta, and recognized by grants and awards from Akademie Schloss Solitude, Broadcast Music Incorporated (BMI), and the University at Buffalo (Presidential Fellowship & Dissertation Fellowship).

Colin holds degrees in music composition from the University at Buffalo (SUNY) (PhD), University of Huddersfield (MPhil) and the University of Michigan (BM, summa cum laude), and also works as founding artistic director of Null Point, an artist-run initiative focused on interchanges between music and contemporary art. For more information: https://colintucker.studio/.

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Public Programs

Spectatorship has Never Been Neutral 

Artist Talk (live-streamed online)

Thursday, April 25, 7pm Eastern Time

This talk, based on Tucker’s book-in-progress on the politics of concert music spectatorship, traces how the racializing mechanisms have been intrinsic to spectatorial concert music since its inception, as a way to open up a politicized dismantling of concert music and spectatorial infrastructures. The talk considers the historical emergence of concert music around 1800, reading canonical writings on spectatorship by Immanuel Kant and WH Wackenroder through the analytics of Black study scholar Denise Ferreira da Silva. This reading then provides an interpretive context for a multidisciplinary consideration of the racializing work of routine spectatorial protocols (i.e. silent, immobile, single-sense aural perception; the packaging of musical practice in fixed, knowable, reproducible Works, etc.).

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Sensation is Not Neutral

participatory performance for spectators with objects, images, audio, piano, print, textiles, and chairs in a concert hall

Thursday, April 25, 8pm

This program features a variety of ways of marking the politics of often unmarked defaults of concert music, such as listening protocols, aesthetic discourse, and physical infrastructures (e.g. chairs, printed programs). Taking as axiomatic that Western modernity treats sensory (in)capacity as an alibi for necro-biopolitical distinctions, the featured pieces position the concert hall’s fashioning of the spectator’s sensory capacity within broader imperial necro-biopolitics. Attendees will have the option of participating or not participating in directed yet open-ended listening, movement, speaking activities which both cite and reframe routine concert music protocols.

realization of Colin Tucker, so sensitive as to need protection, realized by Megan Kyle/Null Point. Photo by Colin Tucker.

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Related program (same location): 

Future Resonance Festival: What is the Real Sound of Toronto?

4:00-6:00PM Panel Discussion

6:00-7:00PM Reception

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For further information:

https://on.cmccanada.org

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