Installation by Brian House creates audio from feedback of four different sheets of metal affected by a realtime feed from water quality sensors examining a polluted river:
The Animas River flows through the mountains of Southwestern
Colorado, through what was once the undisputed land of Ute and Navajo
people before the encroachment of miners in the 19th century. In 2015,
the EPA was performing maintenance on the abandoned Gold King Mine when
it accidentally released three million gallons of wastewater
contaminated with heavy metals into the river, turning it a bright
orange and threatening agriculture, tourism, and an already “disturbed”
alpine ecology.
Animas comprises four suspended panels of industry-processed
metal, each 26”x42,” made of iron-oxidized steel, aluminum, copper, and
lead respectively—all metals that have exceeded EPA tolerances in the
river. A contact microphone and audio transducer are affixed to each
panel in a feedback circuit together with an amplifier. This causes each
metal to vibrate at its own resonant frequency, creating a complex
drone in the gallery space. The quality of the sound is adjusted by
modulating the gain of the amplifiers—Animas does this in
accordance with real-time data from water quality sensors placed in the
river by the USGS. Changes in the clarity of the water, invisible
indicators of the dissolved metals within it, and the dynamics of its
daily and seasonal flows all become sound in the gallery, producing
timbral “color” from the river’s continually changing composition.
Animas resists over-simplified representations of
environmental degradation, creating a felt relationship to the river. It
acknowledges how our limited temporal sensibilities are challenged by
the imbrication of the geologic time of minerals, the historical time of
extractive industries, and the immediate urgency of sane and equitable
responses to rapid ecological change.