
Esther Venrooij, Grey Alder, 2023
Esther Venrooij has built an international reputation with her work about the interaction between sound and space. She is known for her attentive and sensitive approach, which always results in extremely balanced and spine-chilling compositions and installations. Her fascination for listening – to others or to an environment, as well as the observation of those who listen – invariably leads to the development of impressive compositions in terms of image and sound.
For Watou festival 2023 she developed an installation within the scope of LANDSCAPES | Feel Flanders Fields. For this purpose she read and watched testimonials from soldiers on both sides of the front line during WWI, such as the controversial writer Ernst Jünger. Her main interest lies in the description of sounds and soundscapes consisting of background noises, static and auditory hallucinations. Moments of severe intensity alternate with absolute silence, as illustrated aptly by the recent blockbuster ‘All Quiet on the Western Front’. One soldier testifies that he listens much more than he hears. At 11 a.m. on 11 November 1918, the war violence abruptly ceases. All of a sudden, the world goes dead quiet.
Venrooij translated all of this into a very layered work method. Together with performer Niels Demeirleir Venrooij worked on a series of gestures inspired by listening to the erstwhile war landscape around Ypres and Watou. For instance, looking up and listening while lying flat on the ground, legs bent and head turned to the side, whispering or leaning against a tree.
Audiovisual recordings of this site-specific performance were made with film maker Ans Mertens. In turn, these formed the basis for a series of large overlapping line drawings as a kind of ‘dual images’. For the quadrophonic sound installation through four speakers Venrooij not only listened to the surrounding former war landscape, but also drew inspiration from historic audio and visual material.
During her field research in the Ypres region Esther Venrooij, in addition to the ‘scars in the landscape’, also found several other first-hand witnesses of the total destruction: trees. ‘Grey Alder’ represents a species of birch that was once quite common in the region.
Adaptation of the text written for the catalogue of Arts Festival Watou 2023 /kom.po’zi.ci.o:/
For more information see her website.