Margaret Noble (artist)

Margaret Noble (born 1972) is an American conceptual artist, sound artist, installation artist, teacher and electronic music composer.

Margaret Noble
Margaret Noble, 2012
Born1972 (age 4748)[1]
NationalityAmerican
EducationUniversity of California, San Diego (BA)
School of the Art Institute of Chicago (MFA)
MovementSound art
Installation art
Sound sculpture
Websitemargaretnoble.net

Early life and education

The daughter of artist Jill Hosmer,[2] Noble was born in Waco, Texas,[3][4] and grew up in the City Heights neighborhood of San Diego,[5] moving there in 1982 at the age of 9.[4] Her youth in City Heights has been described as "dependent on welfare, captivated by hip-hop and dance music, among racially diverse neighbors."[6] She earned a BA in philosophy from the University of California at San Diego in 2002, and an MFA in sound art at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 2007.[7]

Career

As a house music disc jockey, Noble performed at underground clubs internationally[8][9] and in Chicago, Illinois, where she spent five years as a DJ.[10] In 2007, she moved to San Diego to teach media production at High Tech High School in Point Loma while continuing her sound art practice.[4][11]

She collaborated in 2011 with math teacher David Stahnke in the "Illuminated Mathematics" project,[12] winning second place in knowledge building and critical thinking, among twelve educators who represented the U.S. at Microsoft's Global Learning Forum.[13] They went on to win first place in "Knowledge Building and Critical Thinking" category of the Global Forum Educator Awards.[14]

Frakture (2009-10)

Noble's Frakture, a remix of a 1953 vinyl recording of George Orwell's novel Nineteen Eighty-Four, is an "eight-track audio collage of analog synthesizer, acoustic drums, recordings of healthcare protests, contemporary political propaganda, emergency alarms, the New York Stock Exchange, dice rolling"[15] and other sounds.[16][9] On the recording, Noble reads excerpts from the text of the novel.[17]

Sound art and installations (2012-present)

What Lies Beneath, by Margaret Noble

Noble's installation 44th and Landis opened in 2012 at the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego. The large-scale multimedia art piece combined Victorian-style paper dolls with 1980s urban influences based on her upbringing in San Diego's City Heights neighborhood, and included a performance by Noble.[5][18] The show's visual centerpiece was a hanging series of 100 paper dolls, along with paper-doll clothing, objects and architecture.[19] In her 2016 interactive piece "What Lies Beneath", she worked in sound sculpture, creating a tall wooden box with instructions next to it to raise the lid, which caused sounds of organ pipes, truck brakes and other dissonance to emit. The person interacting with it controlled the sound with the lid, with a "storm" inside the box.[3]

I Long to Be Free from Longing, by Margaret Noble

Her "Head in the Sand" is a wooden box sitting on four legs with a head-sized hole in the top and instructions to visitors to place their heads in the hole and wait. Inside is a chambered light and sound show with soft pastoral sounds, the hole serving as a sanctuary from the art exhibit itself.[3] "Head in the Sand" was included in her 2016 exhibition Resonating Object, an interactive mixture of sound, sculpture and videos, at South Puget Sound Community College in Olympia, Washington. The exhibition also included "I Long to Be Free From Longing" and "Material Shrine for the New Class", featuring dangling objects the visitor could squeeze to activate different sounds.[20] Her 2014 interactive sound installation "I Long to Be Free From Longing" won first place in the 23rd annual Juried Exhibition at the Athenaeum Music & Arts Library in San Diego.[21]

Noble's 2016 sound art installation Time Strata, a public art commission for the Port of San Diego at the Cesar Chavez Park pier, consisted of three sound sculptures made of materials including vintage buoys, hunks of bamboo, bells, stainless steel and harp strings, along with sounds of creatures like snapping shrimp in the water under the pier. Microphones placed around the pier fed the sound into a mixer and then into four digital consoles where participants could sample and alter the sounds.[22]

I Have Arrived, by Margaret Noble

For The Collector, Noble worked with puppeteers Animal Cracker Conspiracy and visual directors Bridget Rountree and Iain Gunn, creating a multi-layered soundscape that used animated video, live video projection and puppetry to tell a story of a debt collector.[23] Righteous Exploits, a 2013 experimental performance created with Justin Hudnall, used a combination of live audio and video multimedia and performance art.[24]

Her 2018 installations of Resonating Objects included "lawn sprinklers sitting on grass-covered pedestals, playing their percussive, shimmering, water-spraying sounds", entitled "I Have Arrived", which explores the use of expendable resources on lawns, or status symbols.[6]

A Shit Pile of Lights and Sounds for Your Pleasure, by Margaret Noble

Two other pieces are "Scaled Discords, 2015", with spinning tops representing "power structures, resource allocation and racial inequality in America", and "A Shit Pile of Lights and Sounds for Your Pleasure" consisting of "mash-up of Lite Brite, a Ouija board, and an early Akai sampler".[6]

Critical reception

Noble's art has been presented on PBS and reviewed favorably in Art Ltd. Magazine, The San Diego Union-Tribune, and San Francisco Weekly.[25] Thomas Larson of the San Diego Reader wrote that "enlarging the sensorium of art with sound begins with disorder," but while visual art may be viewed with "one or one hundred other hushed-up viewers," sound art is more like "a Fourth-of-July picnic, Charles-Ives polyphony, a resolute disequilibrium".[3]

Now Is Not a Good Time, by Margaret Noble

Reviewer Michael James Rocha said in 2016, "Artist Margaret Noble isn't afraid to push the boundaries of what's art."[20]

Observing Frakture, Jennie Punter of Musicworks wrote of Noble's "underground club DJ’s flair for performance and a conceptual artist's commitment to the rigorous investigation of ideas".[15] Mark Jenkins of The Washington Post wrote, "Her primary goal is audience participation, whether that involves turning a crank or inserting one's head into a box to prompt whooshing sounds. Noble's work completes its circuit when the spectator is, literally or figuratively, inside it."[26]

Of the exhibit 44th and Landis, Drew Snyder noted, "...there is an excess to the sound collage, a soft but persistent drone of spinning bottles or coins, rolling glass marbles, the eternal creak of a cabinet hinge, the rapt knocking on a door, or the sound of something falling over. These reverberations are strikingly material, a confluence and collision of metal, plastic, wood and glass that mash up and reconfigure what we can imagine as a neighborhood's aural life."[27]

Discography

Albums

  • Frakture (2010, self-released on CD and vinyl)

Compilations

  • "Nufon", from Female Pressure (2008, Austrian DVD release)
  • "Safer is Better", from Musicworks #118 Spring 2014 (2014, CD)[28]

Solo exhibitions

  • 44th and Landis, Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, 2012[5]
  • Touch, Ohrenhoch der Geräuschladen Sound Gallery, Berlin, Germany, 2014[3]
  • Dorian's Gray, Roswell Museum and Art Center, Roswell, NM, 2015
  • Resonating Objects, Institute of Contemporary Art, San Jose, CA, 2015
  • Interactivity: Sight and Sound, Cafritz Foundation Arts Center, Montgomery, MD, 2015
  • Resonating Objects, Kenneth J. Minnaert Center for the Arts, South Puget Sound Community College, Olympia, WA, 2016[20]
  • Surrogate Daydreams, Mute Gallery, Lisbon, Portugal, 2016[29]
  • Incorporeal Things to Control, Athenaeum Music & Arts Library, San Diego, CA, 2016[3]
  • Surrogate Daydreams, LAAA Gallery 8 25, Los Angeles, CA, 2016
  • Resonating Objects, Monterey Peninsula College Art Department Gallery, Monterey, CA, 2018[6]
  • Resonating Objects, Lewis-Clark State College Center for Arts & History, Lewiston, ID, 2018[2]

Honors and awards

  • International Government's Grant, 2007[15]
  • Hayward Prize, 2007[28]
  • University of California Alumni "Change the World" Scholarship[7]
  • Microsoft Global Educator Award for Knowledge Building[15]
  • Creative Catalyst Fellowship, 2012[30]
  • First Prize, Musicworks composition contest, for "Safer is Better", 2013[15]
  • First Place, Athenaeum Juried Exhibition, for I Long to Be Free From Longing, 2014[21]

Selected sound art installations

References

  1. "T.I.N.A. Prize". lisboa.tinaprize.com. 2016. Archived from the original on 24 June 2016. Retrieved 16 October 2018.
  2. Schmidt, Michelle (1 November 2018). "What sound does art make?". The Lewiston Tribune. Archived from the original on 16 Feb 2019. Retrieved 2018-11-25.
  3. Larson, Thomas (June 8, 2016). "Noisy Margaret Noble seeks friend not foe". The San Diego Reader. Archived from the original on 15 May 2017. Retrieved 12 October 2018.
  4. Chute, James (16 June 2012). "Artist Margaret Noble knows City Heights". The San Diego Union-Tribune. Archived from the original on 24 October 2016. Retrieved 12 October 2018.
  5. Chute, James (24 March 2012). "Margaret Noble embarks on large-scale work for Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego". The San Diego Union-Tribune. Archived from the original on 24 October 2016. Retrieved 23 October 2016.
  6. Ryce, Walter (2 November 2018). "An artist explores the world through recycled objects, installation and sound". Monterey County Weekly. Retrieved 2018-11-25.
  7. DeVries, Henry (2 August 2010). ""Change the World" Scholarship Awarded to Sound Artist". UCSD News Center. Archived from the original on 2 November 2018. Retrieved 19 May 2019.
  8. Hattam, Meredith (4 January 2010). "Sushi's 'Fresh Sound' Music Series Blends Big Brother And A Golden Voice". KPBS. Archived from the original on 30 January 2010. Retrieved 15 October 2018.
  9. "She Has 1984 on Vinyl". San Diego Reader. Archived from the original on 13 August 2013. Retrieved 15 October 2018.
  10. Chute, James (11 August 2012). "Creating '44th and Landis' provided Margaret Noble with an art education". The San Diego Union-Tribune. Archived from the original on 13 August 2013. Retrieved 15 October 2018.
  11. Honan, Mat (19 April 2010). "Found: The Future of Children's Books". Wired. 18 (5). Archived from the original on 21 April 2014.
  12. "Students Animating Fractals, Thinking on Pi and mental illness, and Cryptography? And it's math class and art class too!". TeachTec. Retrieved 2018-10-15.
  13. "12 educators to represent the U.S. at the Partners in Learning Global Forum". TeachTec. Archived from the original on 16 October 2018. Retrieved 2018-10-15.
  14. Bennett, Kelly (15 November 2011). "Teachers of Math's Creative Side Win Global Prize - Voice of San Diego". Voice of San Diego. Archived from the original on 16 October 2018. Retrieved 16 October 2018.
  15. Punter, Jennie (Spring 2014). "Margaret Noble's Safer Is Better". musicworks. Archived from the original on October 13, 2018. Retrieved October 12, 2018.
  16. Morlan, Kinsee (24 November 2010). "Margaret Noble records, listens and revises". San Diego City Beat. Archived from the original on 15 October 2018. Retrieved 14 October 2018.
  17. Tallon, Camille (Summer 2012). "44th & Landis". Manor House Quarterly (04): 45–49.
  18. Stephens, AnnaMaria (July 2012). "The Exhibitionists" (PDF). Riviera Magazine (published 2 July 2012): 78–80. Retrieved 15 October 2018.
  19. Carone, Angela (10 September 2012). "Growing up in City Heights". PRI Arts, Culture & Media. Archived from the original on 15 October 2018. Retrieved 12 October 2018.
  20. Gilmore, Molly (22 September 2016). "Visitors, sound part of the art in 'Resonating Objects'". The Olympian. Archived from the original on 15 October 2018. Retrieved 15 October 2018.
  21. Chute, James (14 August 2014). "Noble gets top prize in Athenaeum exhibition". Archived from the original on 24 October 2016. Retrieved 15 October 2018.
  22. Myrland, Susan (13 September 2016). "Fall arts 2016: Up close with artist Margaret Noble". The San Diego Union-Times. Archived from the original on 14 September 2016. Retrieved 15 October 2018.
  23. Janiak, Lily (10 September 2012). "Occupy Fringe Theatre 2012: The Good, the Bad, and the Glowy". SF Weekly. Archived from the original on 24 October 2016. Retrieved 15 October 2018.
  24. Cavanaugh, Maureen; Casares, Carissa (11 April 2013). "Weekend Preview: Righteous Exploits, Stay Strange and The Big Read". KPBS. Archived from the original on 17 August 2013. Retrieved 15 October 2013.
  25. "Peripheral ARTeries Art Review". Issuu. March 2015. Retrieved 2018-10-14.
  26. Jenkins, Mark (26 January 2016). "In the galleries: Strangely familiar objects for the eyes and ears". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on 27 January 2017. Retrieved 8 October 2018.
  27. Snyder, Drew (Jan 2013). "San Diego: Margaret Noble: 44th and Landis at Museum of Contemporary Art" (PDF). Art Ltd.: 22. Archived from the original (PDF) on 15 October 2018 via art ltd. archives 2013.
  28. Noble, Margaret (2010). "Safer is Better". www.musicworks.ca. Musicworks 118 CD — Musicworks magazine. Archived from the original on 18 May 2014. Retrieved 2018-10-08.
  29. "Margaret Noble". SOLO Music Gallery. 2018. Archived from the original on 11 September 2016. Retrieved 15 October 2018.
  30. "The San Diego Foundation Showcases Creative Catalyst Grantees". The San Diego Foundation. 2014-02-06. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 2019-05-19.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.