Home » Portfolio » Page 2

Category: Portfolio

Tongues

Tongues (2019) is based on conversational applications, as well as text-to-speech and speech-to-text conversion technologies. The work creates a dialogue between two voices originating in automatic speech translation applications, that is audible in the exhibition space. “Carmit” and “Majid” are synthesized generic voices, their speech capabilities developed from and are based on digital sounds in Hebrew and Arabic. Ostensibly responding to one another, they repeat words in both languages. Original music is intermittently played in the background, designed to accompany the emotional frequencies absent from the speakers’ voices. The meeting between the two speakers generates a chain reaction of vocal repetitions. As the voices are gradually drawn away from their original tone, the phrases become vague and the differences between the languages increasingly ambiguous. The work pinpoints a certain form of digital communication in a manner that causes it to fail, as the original goal of the translation application is to aid in conducting a dialogue, whereas here, the emphasis is accorded to a deficiency in clarity due to the mix of languages. Zlekha Levy explores a history of misunderstandings, linguistic inventions, and leaks between the neighboring languages, relating to conversation management and translation applications as both a problem and a solution.

https://vimeo.com/349845674

Programming : Khen Price / Translation and Language Consultancy: Natheer Taha (‘Ulban’) / Musical production: Aviad Zinemanas, Omer Schonberger / Mix: Aviad Zinemanas / Cinematography: Hila Ido / Lypsinc: Dor Zlekha Levy, Yafit Ido
This work was produced with the support of the Ostrovsky Family Fund.

On One Stalk

‘On One Stalk’ places the audience between two cannons, aimed at each other. The first cannon is located on top of a fountain at the entrance to the city of Nahariya, Israel. The second cannon is deep in the sea, about two kilometers from the shores of Saida, Lebanon. While the two inoperative cannons rust on both sides of the Lebanese-Israeli border, the space between them represents an unrealized desire for an encounter. The soundtrack was designed to resemble the air cycles of the divers who photographed the cannon in Saida, and the bubbling of the pipes of the colorful fountain in Nahariya. Multiple projections are installed in a way that emphasizes the presence of the viewers inside the exhibition space.

The Installation view was shot during the presentation of the project in IDRIS Art Space, Tel Aviv. Cinematography: Hila Ido

The soundtrack was produced with the help of Omer Schonberger and Andres Gurwicz.

Harb

Harb (2018) is an audiovisual sequence based on footage shot in Israel during the most recent military operations. Its soundtrack draws samples of Zionist war songs that were recorded in Israel during the Six-Day War (1967). ‘Harb’ explores the identity conflict presented in the original records, made by Jewish musicians who migrated to Israel from Arab countries. As these musicians integrated into the Zionist state, they kept the language and culture that identified with the nation’s enemies. These songs, sung in Jewish Arabic dialects to Arabic folk tunes, were not included in any of the main collections of Israeli war songs and have been forgotten over the years.

‘Harb’ soundtrack was designed by Aviad Zinemanas, and it is based on original music created by Mixmonster, Turnymator, MishMash and O MER for ‘Songs of the Next War’  project.

Mañana Mañana

Two rosettes are projected in a space, over a square pyramid shaped ceiling. The rosettes were filmed out of ancient musical instruments; an Oud and a 7-course Lute. Both instruments descended from a common ancestor via diverging paths. The instruments were playing variations of a single melodic theme called “La Mañana de San Juan”. The rosettes function as a singular source of light and sound within the space. ‘Mañana Mañana’ introduces an inherent relationship between light and sound and defines the space as a sound board and a platform for a unique audio-visual occurrence.

Musical production: Omer Schonberger / Lute: Eliav Lavi / Oud: Marina Tosich / Additional recordings: Ofer Tisser. Cinematography: Nadav Porat-Chomsky /Grip: Johny Zlobin.