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sempozyum_bildiri_kitabi

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Radiogram: original 1960s radiogram, oak veneer, wood, sound track;<br />

Dimensions: h.77 x w.106 x d.42 cms.<br />

Motion sensored, interactive sound track: multiple layered tracks/ looped /duration: 11:09 mins.<br />

This interactive sculpture puts the viewer in the centre of the encounter. The work consists of<br />

two core elements, that is, a sound track and six appropriated and reconfigured vinyl ‘records’. The<br />

idea was to move out from the specific to the general and thus relocate the family’s experience to<br />

wider cultural belief systems and a broader social and historical context. Radiogram is not a ‘found’<br />

object but a ‘real’ family artefact and crucially it belongs in the communal space of the family, living<br />

room. For the family it represents the aspirations of the family’s life in England. For example, this<br />

piece ‐ along with some other special items, came ‘home’ with the family to Ireland in 1966 and<br />

henceforth was known as ‘the London furniture.’ It therefore embodies the family’s hopes, status<br />

and upward mobility. It appears in several sequences of the home movie footage.<br />

The sound track is constructed from over 43 individual, fragmentary sound files. These range<br />

from: archival recordings of key 1960s Irish political broadcasts, the humming and crackling sound of<br />

analog radio, environmental recordings of train stations and sea harbors, archival radio broadcasts in<br />

several languages, snippets from the aunties and my mother’s interviews and an iconic, 1960s pop<br />

song. There are also several narrative registers, for example, moving from first personal to third<br />

person narratives in order to suggest that these different positions vie and struggle for our attention<br />

creating a variety of perspectives that bring us closer or further away from events and ultimately<br />

alter our view of the past. I also created six new ‘records’ encased in pullout, transparent, archival<br />

files (stored on either side of the radiogram). On each vinyl I designed and forged alternative, centre<br />

labels. These new song titles represent my re‐interpretation of the family’s emigration story, in six<br />

parts, denoting different physical and temporal locations. These range across two countries England<br />

and Ireland and span the period 1950‐1966. For example, my birth, my parents initial emigration<br />

period, ongoing family holidays in Ireland and strategic, political events.<br />

Radiogram contests the idea of a homogeneous cultural and social ‘transmission’ by alluding to<br />

the multiple political, cultural, social and family discourses that circulate one’s life in a given period.<br />

By appropriating a key piece of 1960s, modern technology ‐ used to both entertain and glamorise the<br />

family and stay ‘in touch’ with current news and events ‐ I wanted to transform this familiar piece of<br />

iconic, domestic furniture into a more radicalised, counter‐archive that speaks back to more urgent<br />

issues of what constitutes Irish identity and representation in the period under review. The multiple,

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