The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Projecting new light on history

A spectacula­r outdoor video projection and live music event, celebratin­g 150 years of The Mcmanus, will be taking place in Dundee on November 25

- Michael alexander

It’s been a year of celebratio­n for The Mcmanus: Dundee’s Art Gallery and Museum with an exciting programme of exhibition­s and events.

It’s all to mark the institutio­n’s 150th anniversar­y and to highlight the important role it has played, past and present, as a major cultural attraction.

Now, as a finale to the celebratio­ns, the building itself will be the canvas for a spectacle of art, light and sound that will virtually turn the museum building inside out to expose its contents.

Drawn to Light, featuring a largescale video installati­on and soundtrack, will take place on the evening of November 25.

It’s the work of contempora­ry artist Duncan Marquiss and musician Jonnie Common who were invited to delve into the city’s extraordin­ary collection of objects and artworks to find inspiratio­n for their visual-audio work.

Duncan, a Glasgow School of Art graduate, has spent the past six months working with curators and staff at The Mcmanus to draw together images and stories triggered by objects in the collection. From this source material, he has created a video that will be a projection mapped onto the façade of architect Sir George Gilbert Scott’s extraordin­ary Gothic Revival-style building.

He will be joined for a special live performanc­e by musician and composer Jonnie Common, who will perform a new compositio­n on the museum steps, similarly inspired by the spaces, sounds and stories of The Mcmanus.

Over several visits to the museum outof-hours, Common recorded the electronic tones of swipe card access

doors, the sounds of office printers, internet servers, dehumidifi­ers, the rumble of huge moving storage units as well as the reverberan­t frequencie­s of every gallery space, stairwell and corridor across the museum’s three floors. From these recordings, he has built up tones, rhythms and melodies for his new compositio­n.

Duncan Marquiss said: “Initially I was interested in how the collection is organised that kind of triggered ideas – these analogies between a collection of objects and a mind that might emerge out of all these smaller component parts.

“But also in my work I guess I’m also interested in how you can sort of map ideas from one medium into another. I’m planning to collage a lot of the items together, but also thinking about how these objects will exist almost in some kind of void. “

I think there will be some really melodic ambient stuff

Common said: “For this project, I’ve been commission­ed to make music from the collection, so I’m investigat­ing ways of taking sounds from the museum that are very specific to the site.

“At first I was a bit worried about how I was going to do it. But that limitation of not being allowed to touch a lot of stuff has led to a lot of different ideas, all of which I’m pretty much investigat­ing.

“For example, when they move the racks in the ceramic store they make a kind of nice mechanical rhythmic clicking noise and it’s almost like a very jazzy snare pattern.

“There’s the strong room that’s just full of metal box files. And I went in there just with the idea of recording a couple of those and then I realised very quickly that every single one of those made a very different noise.

“I think there will be some really melodic ambient stuff and I think it’s going to get pretty intense.”

Drawn to Light is curated by independen­t creative producer Siôn Parkinson and will take place on Saturday November 25 between 7pm and 8.30pm.

The project is supported by Creative Scotland and the Northwood Trust. A programme of talks and tours is supported by Heritage Lottery Fund.

www.mcmanus.co.uk

 ??  ?? Contempora­ry artist Duncan Marquiss and musician Jonnie Common at The Mcmanus.
Contempora­ry artist Duncan Marquiss and musician Jonnie Common at The Mcmanus.
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