Chicago Sun-Times

SCULPTING MILLENNIUM SOUND

Olivia Block’s new sound installati­on honors a neglected public work by artist Harry Bertoia—and the untapped potential of Pritzker Pavilion’s huge speaker system.

- By PETER MARGASAK

For a brief period after its completion in 1974, the Standard Oil Building at 200 E. Randolph (now the Aon Center, previously the Amoco Building) was the tallest skyscraper in Chicago. The following year the Sears Tower was finished, claiming the crown for itself, but that June designer, sculptor, and sound artist Harry Bertoia unveiled a massive public artwork, commission­ed in ’74, in the plaza of the Standard Oil Building. His “sonambient sculpture” originally sat within a 4,000-square-foot reflecting pool and consisted of 11 vertical rows of copper and brass rods ranging from four to 16 feet in height, arranged at right angles or in parallel. Because the rods are closely spaced and slightly flexible, strong winds or pushes from visitors cause them to brush together, creating a rich spatialize­d field of chiming, shimmering sounds.

Compared with other monolithic public sculptures in Chicago—the Picasso in Daley Plaza, the Miró outside the Cook County Administra­tion Building, the Calder in Federal Plaza, Anish Kapoor’s Cloud Gate in Millennium Park—this Bertoia masterpiec­e has been overlooked and neglected. In contrast to those other artworks, which are impossible to miss if you’re within a block of them, the Bertoia piece is at the top of a tall flight of stairs, which makes it hard to recognize from the street. For many years its reflecting pool was bone-dry, and in 2013 five rows of rods were sold; the remaining six now stand in two smaller pools on opposite sides of the Aon Center plaza.

Chicago sound artist Olivia Block, though, has long felt a special attachment to the Bertoia sculpture. “I always thought they seemed in disrepair,” she says, “a little bit ignored. When I taught at the School of the Art Institute I took students there, and they loved the sculptures.” Three years ago she and fellow sound artist Lou Mallozzi, founder of Experiment­al Sound Studio, began brainstorm­ing a work that would shed new light on the Bertoia piece. Mallozzi had already organized a couple of sound installati­ons across the street from it in Millennium Park, including 2008’s “Train Time,” in which Block had also participat­ed. They imagined somehow connecting each of the sculpture’s sounding rods to one of the loudspeake­rs hanging from the gorgeous trellis above Pritzker Pavilion’s lawn, but soon other projects took precedence and the Bertoia idea ended up on the back burner. It didn’t stay there, though, and this weekend, after nearly a year of grant applicatio­ns, administra­tive meetings, and other preparator­y work, Block will unveil the Pritzker installati­on “Sonambient Pavilion.”

HARRY BERTOIA WAS a jewelry artist, printmaker, and sculptor, but he remains best known for a line of chairs he designed for Knoll in 1952, many of which are still in production today. He constructe­d those iconic chairs from welded wire whose curves were designed to cradle the body— before working for Knoll, he’d assisted Charles

Eames in bending the wood used in the older designer’s even more famous chairs. Metallic wires became a fixation for Bertoia in the late 50s, after he snapped one that he was trying to bend and it struck another. The sound it made riveted him. In an interview with the Smithsonia­n Institute in 1972, he explained, “If one wire produces such a sound, what would two rods produce or what would ten or a hundred.” His obsession with sound would continue unabated until he died in 1978 at age 63.

Bertoia made many large-scale public sound sculptures like the one in Chicago, but he also developed a rigorous practice designing smaller, more diverse works that employed similar principles. He kept them in a barn outside his home in Bally, Pennsylvan­ia (about 20 minutes from R Reading), and mostly used them for his own edificatio­n or eagerly demonstrat­ed them for visitors. He installed four microphone­s and a tape machine and began recording sound art he created using his sculptures, sometimes incorporat­ing playback of earlier recordings that he ran at varied speeds and in both directions. The pieces’ mix of hushed rustling, resonant drones, and thunderous crashes is dense with overtones; though they probably don’t qualify as music according to most convention­al definition­s, they’re engrossing and unique. Bertoia wasn’t a composer, and he designed his sculptures with the notion that anyone could “play” them.

In 1970 he released his first album of this work, called Sonambient. In early 1978, diagnosed with lung cancer, he set about releasing ten more (all with the same title as the first), but they didn’t come out till after his death. On November 27, Important Records will celebrate Bertoia’s centennial by releasing all 11 albums in a lavish 11-CD box set accompanie­d by a 100-page booklet. The label has also partnered with the Bertoia estate to reboot his Sonambient label, which will begin issuing previously unheard music from the 400 or so reel-to-reel tapes he left behind in his barn.

“I’ve had one of those LPs since I was in my 20s,” says Block, 44, who moved to Chicago in 1996 from her native Texas. “And the fact that those sculptures were there the whole time I’ve been here—I just thought it was cool.” When she and Mallozzi began revisiting the idea of a Bertoia sound installati­on late last year, they quickly realized that the logistics of connecting each rod in the Bertoia sculpture to its own speaker on the Pritzker lawn would be too complex. Partly this was because most of the time the sculptures don’t generate sound on their own—the wind isn’t usually enough to trigger them. Block is a composer as well as a sound artist, though she often uses unconventi­onal materials, and her solution was to record a bank of sounds from the sculptures and make them her exclusive source for “Sonambient Pavilion.”

Block shares the affection that many Chicagoans feel for Pritzker Pavilion, but she’s long yearned to use its ornate network of speakers to do something more creative than reproduce a concerthal­l experience. Jonathan Laney of Threshold Acoustics designed the system to mirror a natural room sound, with a built-in delay that lengthens as the grid proceeds south away from the stage. Block fantasized about breaking up the many speakers into multiple clusters, each with their own channel, to achieve a dramatic spatializa­tion—divergent sounds could fill up the massive lawn, allowing the perspectiv­e of the listener to change with location.

ESS commission­ed “Sonambient Pavilion,” and Mallozzi began the formal process that brought it to Pritzker by arranging a meeting in November 14, 2014, with Block, Laney, Millennium Park general manager Neil Speers, and Matt Nielsen, deputy commission­er of cultural planning and operations at the city’s Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events. (At later meetings, they were joined by Ed Uhlir, executive director of the Millennium Park Foundation.) Block was surprised that everyone was amenable to the proposal, but it certainly helped her case that this fall’s Chicago Architectu­ral Biennial was on the horizon— this presented an opportunit­y to celebrate the Bertoia installati­on as well as the work of architect Frank Gehry on Pritzker.

Read the rest of the story at chicagorea­der.com.

 ?? COURTESY OLIVIA BLOCK ?? Olivia Block listens to an early sound check for “Sonambient Pavilion” in Millennium Park on September 29.
COURTESY OLIVIA BLOCK Olivia Block listens to an early sound check for “Sonambient Pavilion” in Millennium Park on September 29.
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