Ealing Feeder – new bell rig in action

Ealing Feeder - case detail

Thanks to everyone who came along to the Arthertz stand at the Kinetica Art Fair. The Ealing Feeder, my new bell rig, survived admirably and is now back in my workshop until its next outing.  It’s coming soon to the Brighton Festival Fringe and to Battersea Power Station.

Video

Here’s some fine footage of the Ealing Feeder in action, from video artist Roger Spy. This was taken the night before the show, just before I programmed the doll’s movements. I’ll be posting more video over the next few days:

Ealing Feeder Video by Roger Spy (click to view video)

Ealing Feeder video by Roger Spy (click to view)

You can also see me talking about this bell rig on Rain Rainycat’s blog. Rain’s video, which sweeps around the exhibition, also includes some shots of Andrew Back’s Nixie tubes and Kathy Taylor’s lovely animated teapot. The ArtHertz stand also features in this article from Herbert Wright, Blueprint Magazine.

Inspiration for the bell rig

bells from the Ealing Feeder

bells from the Ealing Feeder

If you come along to a Spacedog performance, you’ll see the Ealing Feeder playing live. I use it as a backing instrument while Jenny sings and I play the saw or theremin.

I try to make performances that don’t focus on virtuosity but on getting under people’s skin. After a number of years creating music in software, I realised my stage act had lost a lot of the theatricality and sense of jeopardy it had when I was playing with physical sound-making devices (i.e. musical instruments!)  That’s why I started to build robots to accompany me on stage. I wanted to bring some old-school physicality back to the show, without throwing away the high-tech. The Ealing Feeder is the latest version of my robotic bell rig, one of the robots I’ve designed and built for this purpose.

ealingPanelI created the Ealing Feeder with the Arthertz gig at Battersea Power Station in mind. Dennis and Beverley from Arthertz invited Spacedog to participate, after they saw our show Electroplasm in last year’s Brighton Festival Fringe.

Looking for inspiration for the Battersea show, I studied the form of machines at the time of transition between the purely mechanical and the electromechanical age. In London, most middle-class homes were making that transition in the early 1930s, as power stations such as Battersea came on line, fuelling the ‘electric servant’ (i.e. domestic appliance) boom. Homes which used to call up their human servants with bells were switching on electrical machines instead. Oddly enough, my bells are such a throwback (technologically), they look unfamiliar, and perhaps a little eerie, to modern viewers. I hope they give viewers and listeners a sense of the strangeness of people’s early encounters with electrical machines.

The poem around the edge of the work was written in 1930. It’s by a woman who was so intoxicated by the idea of the electric servant, she soothed her baby to sleep by passing an electric current through it (I doubt it worked). You can read more about it here – it’s from the archives of the IET.

The words ‘Ealing Feeder’ come from the control room of Battersea Power Station. The Ealing Feeder was used to vary power to the Ealing district, in response to public demand.


Battersea Power Station gig

This gig evokes the early days of Battersea Power Station, celebrating this landmark and what it means to Londoners. There’s a great line-up: Alex Paterson (The Orb), Ian Eames (maker of some early Pink Floyd videos), Andrew Back, Andy Boyd and Mike Grierson as well as Spacedog. We’re excited to hear that Bishi may also be on the bill.

We’re waiting for final confirmation of the date of the Battersea gig but fingers crossed for 1 June. Tickets will go on sale as soon as the details are confirmed. In the meantime, if you’d like to go on the mailing list, please send an email to sarah [dot] spacedog [at] gmail [dot] com.

Making the bell rig

Ealing Feeder - bell servos

Ealing Feeder - bell servos

The latest version of the bell rig is controlled entirely by two Arduinos, connected to a servo driver board and an array of LEDs. The device can read a stored midi file or can play an incoming midi signal. It’s housed in a black Perspex box, laser cut from my CAD files by Heritage Inlay, Brighton. I’ve used a simple FTIR effect to illuminate the etched, back panel and make its brightness vary in response to sound.

Thanks to Vivien Angliss for making the doll’s outfit and to Colin Uttley for his help with the assembly of the exhibit. While I was building and programming the bell mechanics, Colin did a great job of stuffing the doll with servos. Here, you can see him sewing the doll up again, after deftly hiding wires in her legs.

Colin sewing the servos into the doll

Colin sewing servos into the doll

Ealing Feeder – new exhibit at the Kinetica Art Fair 5-7 February 2010

Juice for the Baby

I’ll be showing off the latest version of my carillon (automatic bell-playing rig) at the Kinetica Art Fair, P3 Gallery, 23 Marylebone Road, London, 5-7 February 2010. You’ll find me on the ArtHertz’ stall Electricity and Ghosts, which gives a sneak preview of our upcoming live show at Battersea Power Station.

Here, it will be playing an electric lullaby, inspired by a delightfully unsettling poem I discovered on the pages of The Electric Age (Vol 1, 1930), a pioneering gadget magazine published by the Electrical Association for Women. The words of the lullaby are inscripted on the piece, along with fragments of domestic circuitry from the time.

I’ll be posting images of the new carillon in a week or so – it features a new figure which may interest anyone who has enjoyed watching my other  robotic dolls in action. The words Ealing Feeder come from the control room of Battersea Power Station, which provided London with electricity during the boom years of the fossil fuel age.

Swinging London (South Bank automaton show)

This mini, automatic puppet show was created on a shoestring for the South Bank Centre, summer 2007. The brief was to come up with something novel inside a garden shed that would celebrate the area and appeal to families. It features dancing puppets and a carillon (robotic bell player).

The puppet show, Swinging London, features London luminaries, past and present, dressed in go-go style. I wanted the puppets to look like a dance group on TV, in the early days of colour television. Reflecting the throw-away nature of celebrity culture, the faces are velcroed on so they can easily be swapped for new ones, according to public demand. Some of the faces are personal favourites (e.g. Kenneth Williams) and a few were chosen by the public (e.g. Lady Penelope and Charlie Drake). Jarvis Cocker also makes an appearance -- he was curating the Meltdown Festival that was taking place at the time.

Swinging London was one of seven sheds that made up this outdoor exhibition, curated by Clare Patey. The shed was put together over just a few weeks on a tight budget. I was grateful to Vivien Angliss, Helen Burtt, Jenny Cotterill, Amanda Hellberg, Emmet Spier and Colin Uttley for their invaluable help in getting it together. Thanks also to Paul and Rachel Attmere for dressing up like the puppets and animating the sheds throughout the opening weekend. The puppets were adapted from 1960s Pelham puppets, scooped up from eBay.

Ragged puppets

I was inspired to make Swinging London after seeing the very dilapidated 1960s puppet show playing on Teignmouth Pier, Devon. I was really struck by how mesmerising the Teignmouth puppets were -- and how convincingly they moved to the music -- even though they were doing nothing more than jiggling up and down. The puppets also had a slightly unsettling look, because of their worn-out clothes and expressionless faces -- this also appealed to me. So this dolly waggling (bad puppetry) is inspired by the 1960s end-of-the-pier classic. The video footage was taken at the end of a busy eight-week run and you can see that the strings have gone saggy and paint has rubbed off the puppets’ shoes, onto the stage, helping them to look suitably ragged.

Slide show images by Emmet Spier

Carillon

The carillon played two and a half octaves of handbells polyphonically, striking them with servo-driven, sprung beaters.

This was my first attempt at building a polyphonic bell playing machine. In 2009, I attempted to build a version of the instrument that put each bell in a separate box, so the instrument could be distributed widely around a space. This Mk II carillon was given its first outing at the Sonic Arts Expo 2009. When this proved too troublesome to take out on the road, I built the Mk III, which clusters all the bells on a single metal frame. The frame , an old shop fitting, is on wheels and is compact enough to fit in the boot of a large car.

See the Mk III carillon in action.