February 6 – July 20, 2025
Known for his distinctive approach to music, Tarek Atoui (Beirut, Lebanon, 1980; lives and works in Paris) investigates the acoustic properties of elements such as water, air, stone, and bronze and the ways in which they absorb sound and return it with unexpected nuances. This process initiates forms of aggregation and curiosity in the visitors. The sonic environments created by the ensemble of the works present in the space suggest possible listening experiences and stimulate non-traditional learning processes.
After an education in music, Atoui began by exploring the properties of sound through performance, and later expanded his research into the spatiality of objects in relation to the artistic context. Throughout his career, he has collaborated with composers and artisans from various countries to invent and produce instruments with a strong sculptural imprint, combining a wide range of materials and skills. Using electronic devices and software, the artist reflects on contemporary social and political realities, revealing the importance of music and new technologies as dimensions of expression and identity. Educational values and social relations are constitutive aspects of Atoui’s practice, which often involves collaborations with various local communities and invites visitors to interact and experience his multi-sensory environments.
Borrowing a specific term from the lexicon of music, in Improvisation in 10 Days Atoui explores the potential of composition in space, bringing the material, sculptural, architectural and relational qualities of the works into dialogue with the immaterial nature of sound and its reverberation in bodies and things. Using the Shed as a large blank canvas, the artist rearranges and recomposes works from one of his previous exhibitions, starting from the identity of the space (a place of production) and the time coordinates (the days on which the artist will set up the exhibition) and using them to “improvise” movements, harmonies, and tunings to create a collective experience in a sonic environment. This is the first time that Atoui has conceived an exhibition as an actual device capable of evolving and materializing over time in a given situation, creating a dynamic relationship between space, instruments, and people. The true potential of the project lies in its “dynamic” status, in its openness to chance.
Tarek Atoui’s works are conceived as constantly evolving projects that change over time and adapt to the different contexts in which they are presented. The artist is often inspired by past works that are reimagined, resulting in a different poetic experience and sensibility with each reworking. His research always begins with an acoustic paradigm that is experimented with through activities such as workshops with local communities of artisans, researchers, or musicians, and then leads to the production of sculptures and installations that invite a meditative and multi-sensory approach. In his work, sound takes on material qualities and, in addition to being heard, it can be transmitted and perceived through vibration, mechanical stress on a surface, or tactile experience. The exhibition presents three bodies of work, harmoniously displayed in space and in dialogue with natural light.
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Tarek Atoui: The Whisperers
Published in conjunction with Tarek Atoui’s 2022 Suzanne Deal Booth / FLAG Art Foundation Prize exhibitions at The Contemporary Austin and The FLAG Art Foundation, The Whisperers documents the artist’s recent sound-based installations rooted in the idea that sound requires transmission through physical materials and in relation to perceiving bodies. He asks questions such as: What happens to sound as it travels through materials like metal, wood, and water? How can we perceive sound by listening not only with our ears but also with our whole bodies?
Atoui’s research and compositional process is highly collaborative and generates networks of community involvement. He works with other musicians, composers, and instrument makers around the world to develop custom materials he calls “tools for listening,” which conduct and amplify sounds in multisensory ways. In tandem with this process, he invites participation from people where his projects are located, involving musicians and non-musicians alike in creative explorations. In addition to installation documentation, The Whisperers includes interviews with Atoui, texts by the artist, and essays by the curators.
Artwork by Tarek Atoui
Forewords by Suzanne Deal Booth and Glenn Fuhrmann
Introduction by sharon maidenberg
Texts by Robin K. Williams and Jonathan Rider
Conversations with Catherine Wood and Audrey Belmin