Bio and images
Glass artists rarely conform to the popular stereotype of
the anti-social, semi-psychopathic, temperamental genius laboring alone in a
freezing garret. Aside from the fact that a hot shop is, well, hot; glass artists as a lot tend to be
both simultaneously warmly collaborative and intensely competitive. They loudly
cheer one another’s successes and work like hell to be the best.
Whatever the technique, making things with glass usually
goes more smoothly if more than one person is involved, but even given the
social nature of working with glass, Elaine Miles is unusual. A commitment to
human interaction, collaboration, and the value of every individual’s creative
potential has been a consistent aspect of her work in glass, in performance,
and other fields. Miles was a PhD candidate at Monash University
in Melbourne, AU when she completed a Winter, 2007 residency at the Creative
Glass Center of America. At CGCA, she continued her work of making both
relatively traditional and experimental musical instruments of glass. Though
she is not a professional musician, she works collaboratively with musicians in
making and selecting objects for performance events which because they are also
visual installations involve lighting. Performances are often videotaped.
Miles’
work is process based. It incorporates people in other disciplines and extends
from making the glass to placing it in a suitable visually pleasing
environment. Various percussive instruments are utilized by professional
musicians in performances which integrate sound, movement, light and shadow. Often
the experience is augmented with delayed playback or previously recorded elements using the same
environment.
The environment’s function as an expression of sound
extends beyond the largely improvised professional performance. Following this,
the audience is invited into the performance environment to explore sounds with
any of the various glass instruments. Although people are initially cautious
about playing or even touching the glass, “after a performance,” Miles says,
“they race in there and go.” Interestingly, she says that in spite of the
public’s enthusiasm, not one object has been damaged during such an interactive
event.
Welcoming the audience into the environment is a key
element for Miles. Her acknowledgement of the creativity of ordinary people was
the centerpiece of a 2005-2006 undertaking in which Miles, originally from a
farm background in Australia, worked with the members of the Country Woman’s
Association on “The Country Woman’s Project” an exhibition of crocheted objects
and other fiber arts. The goal was to draw attention to the often overlooked
art work and creative potential of ordinary people. In the photograph at the
top of this essay, Miles wears a sweater appliquéd with a hand-crocheted doily
that she purchased at a thrift shop. “I believe that we leave something of
ourselves in objects and that they leave something in us,” she says.
The well-known new music percussionist/composer Eugene
Ughetti is currently collaborating with Miles in “The Glass Percussion
Project.” Lighting by Richard Vabre is crucial to the visual aspect part of the
collaboration as the sound technology of Myles Mumford is part of the auditory
experience.
Ughetti and Miles, without the assistance of the other
members of the group, recently performed at PS1: “Roulette” which was broadcast
and will be available on PS1’s video archives (on the internet). All the
instruments for this particular performance were made at WheatonArts. They
included marimbas, bowls that rock and make sounds, gongs, and udu drums.
Gongs are a visually gorgeous feature of Miles’ “immersive
installations.” For a performance, Miles has hung as
many as three hundred from the ceiling. The rondels of clear glass can be
played in a variety of ways. They are decorated: engraved or pressed into molds, so they cast
intriguing kinetic shadows. In terms of sound, gongs can be wired with contact
mics and bowed as well as tapped. Miles also mics ordinary panes of window
glass to produce melodic effects.
Miles sets up the environment and
may offer a number of topics to, Ughetti. Before the event, he familiarizes
himself with the installation and new instruments and chooses the topics and
instruments he wants to use. Sometimes he also records a layer of sound which
becomes part of the live performance.
Miles
is more engaged by the distinctive timbre of sound than by a melodic line. She
enjoys the “little rhythmic patterns” that are conjured up. She has an
insider’s understanding of music, having played five instruments herself, but
she doesn’t perform in public. She does admit to experimenting with the
instruments “when no one’s watching.”
As for the public performances, “The
musicians are acting out a whole new vocabulary of sound.” When she works with
glass on this project, she says “I’m working intuitively and I love that
element of surprise” which she experiences when a performer explores and
exploits the possibilities she has created.
On a deep level, Miles is intrigued
by the use of sound as an aid to meditation. She believes that Eastern music
and the resonances of instruments like hers have a more bodily, physical impact
than typical Western music. One unique instrument she made is a hand cast in
glass. Although it has been broken and glued back together, each finger and
part of the hand sounds a different note.