Cops are Tops, or, Gendarme the whale

While contracting to PTW Architects, Lull Studios designed this funky police station in Coffs Harbour. Although it was the subject of some consternation amongst locals when the scaffolding came down, we’re now informed that the people of this mid-north coastal region are super proud of the fresh and lively persona of the local copshop.

While the colours were sourced and arranged from our own down-res’d, pixellated photographs of the native bushland, the shape took on a decidedly aquatic look. OK, so inside there are the necessary holding cells and rows of workstations, but we managed some cool moments. How low can morale go when you work inside a big colourful stripy whale?

The hard lesson was that years of cost-cutting within the NSW Police Force mean that it no longer has enough resources to provide humane working conditions for those people charged with some of the most difficult jobs in our public services — child protection, anyone? Nowadays, police working conditions are outsourced to bean-counter Facility Managers who have no eye on quality of life, but rather just pursue the old-school single bottom line. The problems are complex but matters could be improved with some political will.

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_DSC1630a_DSC6045a _DSC6047a_DSC1434aPhotos courtesy PTW Architects + Adrian Boddy photography

 

 

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Say cheese*! [*reference limited to Australians probably]

Motion opened in Bega Valley on Friday 17 July and runs to 22 August. Artists are Michele Barker and Anna Munster, Conrad Botes, Natalia Chow, Shaun Gladwell, Sue Healey, Elena Knox, Karen Kriss, Louis Pratt and Hannah Quinlivan.

Elle shows This Haus, with a soundtrack by Lull Studios project Actual Russian Brides.

IMG_0910smallThis Haus 4This Haus 1

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Nemesis Clock unveiled

We posted a progress pic of the installation of our beloved Nemesis Clock on this site a few months ago. The Coffs Harbour Courthouse has been officially opened by NSW Attorney General Brad Hazzard and local MP Andrew Fraser, and we can now present some photos of the finished product.

Nemesis Clock is many things: it’s, well, ahem, a clock; it’s a poem in flux; it’s the Scales of Justice in retribution neon, balanced by the incisive tally stick of Nemesis herself. It’s ancient with a nod to plastic consumerism and 1980s alarm clocks. But most of all it’s a reminder that nothing is ours by right and that we all reap what we sew.

Photos courtesy PTW Architects, Adrian Boddy Photography.

Nem1_web Nem2_web Nem3_web

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Here + now

Latest publication:  Lindsay Webb, ‘Sensory Modulation: “Snoezelen” in Architecture’, in Perception in Architecture: Here and Now, editors Claudia Perren and Miriam Mlecek, Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2015.

Published in conjunction with the symposium Perception in Architecture: HERE and NOW, AEDES Network Campus Berlin (ANCB), 27–28 June 2014.

Critical and comprehensive contributions by academics, artists, architects, designers, urban activists and curators to reflect upon new spatial concepts and thus access new spaces of definitions and perspectives, strategies and processes of perception in architecture.

Perception in Architecture

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Burn, baby, burn …

Disco Infono!   If you’ve been out around Newtown or Darlinghurst for Sydney’s famous Mardi Gras, you’ll have noticed a couple of very special phone booths.

Sponsoring Mardi Gras for the first time, Telstra asked Lull Studios to create Mardi Gras themed phone booths. We got to work with the interactive #discoinfono concept and had the two different designs conceived, constructed and operating in record time.

As installations, they’re all dreamy disco – but they come alive when you step inside. Lasers and animated party lights ignite, as does a special edit of that perennial party fave, Trammps’ Disco Inferno. And just as the vocal reaches burn, baby, burn the mini smoke machine kicks in to complete the experience, making for the year’s best selfie op.

A smash-it-outta-the-park social media success, we are already in talks for next year. Burn, baby, burn!

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Beyond Beyond the Valley of the Dolls

Topping four years of doctoral research, art making and production, Elena’s Beyond Beyond the Valley of the Dolls was singled out as a representative major exhibition at UNSW Galleries, UNSW Art & Design’s flagship gallery. Occupying the entire ground level space for January, the 10 video works on display – Actroid Series 1 – enthralled adults and children alike, with special attention from some major institutions from home and abroad. Here’s hoping the momentum continues through 2015 towards the next round of works.

As production house for the series, Lull Studios acknowledges the many hands and minds that have generously contributed to these art videos, usually for glory over money. A big kiss to all involved – Campbell Drummond, Lian Loke, Velvet Loke, Vivien Mason, Bree Van Reyk, Claire Edwardes, Matt Fatches, Jessica Knox, Anna Crawford, Sylvia Colegrove, Zach Santa Maria, Simone Gooch, Maylei Hunt, Kirsten Packham, Paul Warren, Tom Rivard – we love youse all.

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Nemesis Clock goes up in Coffs Harbour Court House

She’s our nemesis. After a series of weather-related delays, Nemesis Clock by Lull Studios is being mounted high up in the lobby of the posh new court house in Coffs Harbour. Proud!

Is there another retro digital clock made of neon tubing that is also a text artwork? We’d like to see one. Let’s make more! We’ll upload a full project description once the building is officially launched in late January.

Thanks to legends Tim and Millsy, sweating it out in this photo.

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Lindsay + Amanda in ‘Temporal Formal’ at Seidler City

Our project for this year’s Expanded Architecture program, Temporal Formal, is You Are Hear.

An audio installation, You Are Hear takes over the lobby of Harry Seidler’s iconic Australia Square building on Friday November 7.

The intricate microtonal sound environment is being composed based on a geometric analysis of the circular ceiling.

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You Are Hear is a work of aural architecture: it is indoor orienteering for the ears. The sonic environment of Australia Square’s tower lobby is microtonally rendered by detailed geometric analysis of the high curvilinear ceiling. 20 discreet, intersecting audio zones corresponding to Seidler/Nervi’s 20 ribbed, radial segments are composed with precise reference to the geometry of the soffit structure, and distributed around the outer edge of the ground-level circuit in a modular array of 20 tuned speakers handmade by the artists.

The spatial approach is a sensory enactment of subjectivity in architecture. As you move around the doughnut-shaped foyer, you are hearing your precise geolocation within resonating space; tones and rhythms will advance and retreat depending on your ambulation; each point will sound like no other spatial point within the foyer; you are here.

As a formal experiment in sonic dispersion drawing a direct line from Kandinsky, Bartok, Schoenberg and Xenakis to Steve Reich and Max Neuhaus, You Are Hear works against traditional presentation of musical scores wherein patrons receive a work unfolded in time and anchored in singular space. This work is experienced by exploration. The entire cubic space is zinging and alive[i]. Each speaker’s unique cluster of tones is temporally variant, phasing to create an ever-evolving performance, and the mobile audience ‘play the gradient’. The piece has the potential for time-without-end, or more accurately time-with-building’s-end. On the cyclic harmonic–temporal–spatial map, you are hear.


[i] Comparison can be drawn to undersea animals geolocating via sonic radar.

Artists

Amanda Cole is a composer of microtonal instrumental and electronic New Music. She has been commissioned, performed and recorded by Kroumata (Sweden 2009), ISCM Festival (NYC 2010), Ensemble Offspring (Sydney Opera House 2011), Synergy Percussion (Casula Powerhouse 2012) and MCA (Sydney 2013). Amanda was a finalist in the 2010 Blake Prize for Twitter Hymn Book, and was recently awarded an Australia Council Creative Arts Fellowship. amandacolemusic.com

Lindsay Webb is an architect and media artist with a special interest in aural phenomena in the built environment. His latest interdisciplinary collaborative work is Cathode Ray Trio (2014) for analogue electrical voltage and dancer.

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Reinventing the Wheel plays in Berlin

Animated videopoem we made with Campbell Drummond of CNC Film Factory premieres at Zebra Poetry Film Festival Berlin, presented by Literaturwerkstatt Berlin. Second session here. Whole program here. Go well little lady.

Reinventing the Wheel video still

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CRT crazee

The debut of Cathode Ray Trio went splendidly at 107 Projects on Thursday night. We will try to cut up some video of it pronto. This work deserves development and lots of audiences! Bravo Lindsay, Ed and Lian, you nutters.

Cathode.Ray.Trio.
for modular synthesizers and mover

In a rapidly digitizing creative world order, C.R.T. seizes on seemingly redundant analogue technologies to suggest a sound, light and movement environment for three performers united through one electrical network.

C.R.T. reflects that physical networks are not only the skeletons of the current techno-corpus, but also the neural transmitters through which we can perceive and sense the world’s energy.

As fleeting artifact, C.R.T. takes on purposefully humanoid proportions in a push-and-pull performance. The confounding material presence of this largely rejected, outdated tech is poised to re-volt.

Sound: Lindsay Webb
Vision: Ed Leckie
Movement: Lian Loke

technospeak2_small_FLYER

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