Centre 42 » The Room That Grew Buoyant Little By Little https://centre42.sg Thu, 16 Dec 2021 10:08:35 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.2.30 THE ROOM THAT GREW BUOYANT, LITTLE BY LITTLE | by INDEX https://centre42.sg/the-room-that-grew-buoyant-little-by-little-by-index-2/ https://centre42.sg/the-room-that-grew-buoyant-little-by-little-by-index-2/#comments Tue, 20 Mar 2018 05:14:26 +0000 http://centre42.sg/?p=8546 TRTGBLBL Banner

SynopsisCreation ProcessCreative Team
“A poor secret house, as in an old print, that only lives in me, where sometimes I return to sit down and forget the gray day and the rain.” – 1913, André Lafon

In the blue house that lives within, there is a room outside. Inside this room, there is a tree that the room enjoys listening to. Above this tree, there is a chair that rocks in tune with the tree. Under this chair, there is a table that creaks in silence as the chair sings. Within this table, there is a forest that the table was made of. In the middle of this forest, there is a fan that keeps the forest cool. Next to the fan, there is a door that  opens when the fan stops spinning. Beyond the door, there is an ocean in which a blue house lives – the blue house with the room outside and the tree and chair and table and forest and fan and door and ocean. And when the stars align perfectly, the universe shall fold infinitely into the heart of this room as the windows crack and lift the room out of its solidity, dissolving the remnants of its geography of being.

The Room that Grew Buoyant, Little by Little marks INDEX’s next foray into bridging theatre and installation. Developed in residence at Centre 42, this site-specific installation seeks to contemplate the room as a medium to frame the innate narratives of our world, blur the line of dualities, and open up a free space where the visitor is invited to spend time with/in. This site-specific work is generated through observations of the environment, including the mundane and minute. It explore the concept of contrast as they attempt to bring the indoors outdoors and vice versa.

Dubbed as the collective’s “happy project”, the collective’s key mode of working this time is happiness. While the project was conceptualised in 2017, and inspirations about the space collected from January to March 2018, the physical development of the work manifested only in the week before it opened to the public in March 2018. In contrast to the usual need for a predetermined plan or product before the ‘theatre bump-in due date’, the collective has had the freedom to grow, tweak, refine their installation even as it was opened to visitors. The blue house – the room – literally grew richer, day by day.

Collaterals
Others
INDEX is a design collective winged under The Finger Players, comprising Spatial Designer Lim Wei Ling, Lighting Designer Lim Woan Wen and Sound Artist/ Music Composer Darren Ng. Finding common grounds in quiet aesthetics and subtractive work ethos, the collective focuses on design‐centric installations and performances.

Lim Wei Ling | 林玮翎
Architecture trained Wei Ling enjoys manifesting her passion for architecture beyond buildings, believing that the basis of design thoughts is not bounded by genre. Her works stretch across a spectrum of manifestations and were seen in major festivals both in Singapore and overseas. She is also a senior lecturer at the School of Design, Nanyang Polytechnic. She is a graduate of the National University of Singapore in Architecture and subsequently received Masters of Arts in Design Futures with Distinction from Goldsmiths College, University of London. Her awards include the President’s Design Award 2007, Design of the Year.

林玮翎,创作动机来自于从复杂的日常生活中寻找简单的生存之道。受过建筑计的专业训练,她认为建筑/设计的概念不应受限于任类别,而是一种观念和生活态度。她的创作作品不拘形式,横跨多个领域,参加过本地与国际各大艺术节 。玮翎毕业于新加坡国立大学建筑系,后于伦敦大学金匠学院获得一等文学硕士学位,现任教于南洋理工学院设计系 。作品《0501》于2007年获得新加坡“总统设计奖”之年度设计奖。

Lim Woan Wen | 林菀雯
A graduate from the National University of Singapore’s Theatre Studies programme, Woan Wen received the inaugural National Arts Council Arts Professional Scholarship in 2001 and trained at The Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts in stage lighting design. She has won multiple Best Lighting Design awards at the Straits Times Life! Theatre Awards and was conferred the Young Artist Award by the National Arts Council in 2011. Woan Wen divides her time between freelancing, working with The Finger Players as their associate lighting designer, and making work as one-third of the design collective INDEX.

菀雯毕业自新加坡国立大学,主修戏剧,2001年获国家艺术理事会颁发奖学金,前往香港演艺学院进修舞台灯光设计。她目前为十指帮的附属灯光设计,也是创作组合[什只]的创团成员之一,曾多次夺得“《海峡时报》生活!戏剧奖”最佳灯光设计,并于2011年获得由国家艺术理事会颁发的年度青年艺术家奖。

Darren Ng | 黄泽晖
For the past two decades, Darren has sound designed and composed music for over 250 arts productions, and has received multiple Straits Times Life! Theatre Awards for Best Sound. As a music composer, he is signed to record label Kitchen. Label, going by the pseudonym – sonicbrat, and was invited to perform solo in numerous prestigious international music and arts festivals across Europe and Asia. He has been Associate Sound Artist and Music Composer for The Finger Players since 2004 and is a cofounder of the design collective INDEX. He was conferred the Young Artist Award (music; multi-disciplinary practice) in 2012 by the National Arts Council.

泽晖毕业自新加坡国立大学,主修哲学与戏剧。他活跃于本地剧场与国际实验音乐及声音艺术界已有20年,至今参与超过250个舞台剧和艺术演出的音响设计及音乐创作。他也是知名Kitchen. Label 的签属艺人(sonicbrat) ,曾受邀到欧洲和亚洲多个著名音乐节及艺术节演出或呈献声音艺术装置。他目前是十指帮附属声音艺术设计及音乐创作人,也是设计组合[什只]的创办人之一。他曾多次提名与夺得“《海峡时报》生活!戏剧奖”最佳音效设计,并于2012年获得由国家艺术理事会颁发的年度青年艺术家奖。

 Development Milestones 

The Room that Grew Buoyant, Little by Little was developed in residence at Centre 42’s Basement Workshop in March 2018.

15-18 March 2018, 11am-8pm:
World Premiere at various spaces, Centre 42

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A room of one’s own https://centre42.sg/a-room-of-ones-own/ https://centre42.sg/a-room-of-ones-own/#comments Thu, 11 Jan 2018 14:27:38 +0000 http://centre42.sg/?p=7970 INDEX

Theatre design collective INDEX comprises spatial designer Lim Wei Ling, sound artist/composer Darren Ng, and lighting designer Lim Woan Wen.

INDEX was formed as a design collective winged under local theatre company The Finger Players in 2013. That was when spatial designer Lim Wei Ling, sound artist/composer Darren Ng, and lighting designer Lim Woan Wen first worked together for IN:dex, a performance installation presented as part of the Esplanade’s The Studio’s RAW series.

In 2015, INDEX created a three-part series as part of Centre 42’s Vault programme, where the three artists individually responded to Quah Sy Ren’s play, Invisibility, without directors or performances. Instead, they explord the play’s themes through space, sound, and light. And now, they’re back with a new project titled The Little Room that  Grew Buoyant, Little by Little. The team is currently still in the early stages of conceptualising the experiential installation, but here’s a little bit about what we can expect, and how the three of them are planning to work together.

What do you hope to explore with The Room that Grew Buoyant, Little by Little?
Lim Wei Ling:
We are contemplating the idea of a room as a medium in framing the richness of our world, its narratives and experiences; a room as a place that defines or situates a reality that is already there. Our world is already so wonderfully rich with life, unpredictability and multiplicity. Rather than devoting meaning, intellect and form to these, we look to return creatorship to the everyday phenomena that surround us by working as agents to surface, situate, frame and allowing them to create themselves.

How do you plan on exploring that?
Lim Woan Wen:
It is not confirmed yet, but we are looking at putting together a site-specific installation that would be opened up as a free space, where the visitor is invited to spend time with/in.

How did the title of the piece come about?
Darren Ng:
I was reading The Poetics of Space by Gaston Bachelard, and came upon a quote by Jean Laroche in which René Char dreams in “a room that grew buoyant and, little by little, expanded into the vast stretches of travel”. I was very taken by this string of words – how vastly visual, yet at the same time still and quiet, but organic. I felt at once enclosed and released. This sentence grew on me over time. When this project came about, I proposed the title to the others, and it sat well with all three of us.

Tell us about your process in putting together The Room that Grew Buoyant, Little by Little.
DN:
The three of us share the same belief that the work itself will inform us of the intent and content as it develops. In this project, we are learning to let things be and allow the piece to form naturally. So, we try not to constantly steer the project with an end result in mind. We are hoping that by not injecting too much intent as we progress, the piece will act as a pith for open ideas as visitors experience it, allowing them to form meanings and narratives of their own.

This may not be an easy way to work, as it requires us to trust the process and one other a bit more than usual. To facilitate the process, we continue to share thoughts and readings, tidbits of life and encounters from different points of our lives. We muse together and stay honest with one another. Based on what we are looking to explore, we also share our perceptions and our learning with each other, and we respond to them individually while keeping an open mind at all times and staying on the same page.

Do the three of you have very different working styles/approaches, or are you quite similar?
LWW:
The phrase “same same, but different” sums it up – we are three individuals with different personalities, traits, habits, wants and needs. The fact that our medium of expression is different means that our work flow and approaches differ out of necessity in some aspects. But as a collective, we share very similar sensibilities, aesthetics and work methods.

We have been working together for years in theatre before we started INDEX. In our kick-start project IN:dex (supported and presented under the Esplanade’s The Studio’s RAW series) back in 2013, we made an improvised performance installation where we did not reveal our final vocabulary to one another until the actual show. As it turned out, all three elements still “matched” rather substantially and there were audience members who believed it was all pre-rehearsed. In some ways, we thought the experiment had “failed”, but at the same time it said a lot about the shared intrinsic qualities in our individual work.

How do you think INDEX has grown in the last five years?
LWL:
I would like to think that INDEX was created to give ourselves a platform of autonomy and a channel to have honest conversations with one other, the audience and our own selves through our works. 

LWW: Yes I agree. So, in a way, INDEX is a reflection of our combined values and fluctuating states of mind and it has grown as far as we ourselves have, individually as well as collectively.

What do you enjoy most in working with your particular language of expression – space, lights, and sound?
LWL:
The spatial discipline has the privilege (and also danger) of framing the world with ideals and perspectives. I enjoy how it can redefine or amplify the everyday narrative in life, giving new possibilites to the way we operate in the world.

LWW: I am most intrigued by the intangible quality of light as a natural element as well as the language I work with. It is something one cannot physically touch, yet it is capable of touching one viscerally and very deeply. As the sun, light is literally a life-giving source; as a design element, it has the potential to activate the inanimate and visualise energies.

DN: Sound is intangible, invisible and formless, yet very tactile (as vibrations through different mediums). It informs perceptions and beliefs, suspends or alters one’s reality or transports them metaphysically, without the restriction of a physical space. Yet, it interacts with physical spaces, resulting in acoustics and experienced as psychoacoustics. So I enjoy the phenomenological nature of sound, and how much I can learn from it, through responding and interacting with it in space and in time.

By Gwen Pew
Published on 10 January 2018

THE VAULT: #3 THREE BY CENTRE 42

In 2015, INDEX presented three editions of The Vault, where they individually responded to Quah Sy Ren’s play Invisibility. Find out more about their projects and watch the highlights videos below.

The Vault: #3.1 In/VisibilityThe Vault: #3.1 In/Visibility
By Lim Woan Wen
22 & 23 May 2015

The Vault: #3.2 For The Time Being

The Vault: #3.2 For The Time Being
By DarrenNg
22 – 25 Jul 2015

The Vault: #3.3 Scale 1:333333.333…

The Vault: #3.3 Scale 1:333333.333…
By Lim Wei Ling
30 Sep – 3 Oct 2015

Find out more about INDEX’s 2015 work as part of Centre 42’s The Vault programme here, and watch this space for more details about The Room that Grew Buoyant, Little by Little.

This article was published in Blueprint Issue #4.
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