SFCINEMATHEQUE

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Carbon Song Cycle by Pamela Z & Christina McPhee

Presented in association with The Exploratorium and Shapeshifters Cinema

The Exploratorium’s Kanbar Forum
Pier 15 San Francisco, CA 94111

 

NOTE: This performance will be presented three times. The third presentation is FREE.

Thursday August 24 at 8pm
screening included with admission to The Exploratorium After Dark: Visualize and Sonify
Event Admission: $20
Tickets here

Saturday August 26 at 2pm
screening included with general admission to The Exploratorium
Exploratorium Admission: $35-45
Tickets here

Saturday August 26 at 7pm
Event Admission: FREE (does not include admission to The Exploratorium)
More info here

Experience environmental balance and imbalance through a site-specific multimedia performance created by composer/performer Pamela Z and media artist Christina McPhee. Carbon Song Cycle is a work for chamber ensemble and expanded cinema. It’s inspired by ongoing changes and upheavals in the Earth’s ecosystem and by the carbon cycle—the process through which carbon is exchanged between all terrestrial life forms and domains. To compose the music, Pamela knitted together melodic motifs inspired by scientific data on the carbon cycle and texts referencing environmental balance and imbalance. Playing on the idea of the natural exchange of elements they pass sonic material between the players and explore audio elements related to the imagery in Christina’s video material. The video is built from footage Christina shot at petroleum fields, natural gas locations and geothermal sites around backcountry California, along with carbon-inspired drawings and images of processes involving intense heat and chemical transformations. The artists have crafted a site-specific experience that utilizes the architecture of the space to create a unique and intimate experience. The chamber ensemble features Pamela Z (voice and electronics), Dana Jessen (oboe), Suki O’Kane (percussion), Crystal Pascucci (cello) and Charith Premawardhana (viola). (The Exploratorium)

The Exploratorium’s presentation of Carbon Song Cycle is generously supported by the National Endowment for the Arts.