Steve Heimbecker
Steve Heimbecker is a Canadian sound artist, pioneer of sound art in Canada. His works are part of the collection of the Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec and the Alberta Foundation for the Arts. His work has been exhibited in Canada, the United States, Peru and Europe.
Life
Heimbecker was born in Springwater, Saskatchewan in 1959 and studied fine arts at the Alberta College of Art (ACA). He lived and worked in Calgary, Alberta, in Saskatchewan, in Montreal and currently lives and works in the Eastern Townships in Quebec.He is the recipient of two honorary mentions for the Prix Ars Electronica, a first in 2005 in the category "Interactive art" for his work POD: Wind Array Cascade Machine and a second in 2009, in the category "Digital music and sound art ", for The Turbulence Sound Matrix: Signe.
Work
Since the 1980s Steve Heimbecker's two main areas of research and creation are the acousmatic, sculpture and sound installation. He thus seeks to study our relationship to the sound environment and the influence of technologies on it, in the wake of the work of R. Murray Schafer. The artist uses the expression "sound pool" to describe his practice in sound art. He adopted the expression in particular to title a project he carried out in 1996, Soundpool: The Manufacturing of Silence.Notable work
The Turbulence Sound Matrix: Signe (2008)
The Turbulence Sound Matrix is an installation composed of a network of 64-channel speakers forming an immersive sound environment. Signe is a sound art composition designed specifically for TMS and formed of three layers of sound: wind, typewriter and grand piano.POD: Wind Array Cascade Machine (2003)
The POD installation: Wind Array Cascade Machine is made up of two modules. The first module is composed of sixty-four metal rods equipped with motion sensors installed on a roof whose purpose is to record wind fluctuations. This first module is connected to the second, shown in an exhibition hall and formed by sixty-four other poles on which 2880 light-emitting diodes are integrated, which turn on and off at the rate of the wind picked up by the first outdoor module. The data captured by the work are transmitted live on the internet. The electronic and software components of the installation are developed with the team of the artist center Avatar.The work was shown at the Méduse cooperative in Quebec in 2003 as part of the Mois Multi 2 event, at the Langlois Foundation and at Oboro in Montreal, then at the Kiasma Museum of Contemporary Art in Helsinki, Finland, in the part of the International Symposium on Electronic Art in 2004. The piece joined the contemporary art collection of the Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec in 2013.