I don't think anyone at the Sonarama was
prepared for what came next. VJ group 'girlswholikeporno' a
four member all-girl VJ group based in Barcelona, caught the interest of many
Sonar attendees and I noticed the hall filling up steadily with a lot of
people (mostly male!) before the show began. With such a provocative title, I
wasn't surprised.
They started off energetically, projecting different
visuals on each of the three screens, with the DJ providing a funky electro
soundtrack. Images of women in various states of undress and sexual pleasure,
Japanese cartoon-style pixel babes, and black and white bitmapped porn were
mixed over each other at a frenetic pace. I had a chance to speak with the
girls after the show, where they explained that their main aim was to
re-contextualise pornography into a medium designed for
women.
girlswholikeporno
Half-was through the show the fourth member of
the group arrived on stage wearing black overalls and sunglasses, grooving
slowly to the music as she sang lyrics into a microphone - the
girlswholikeporno 'MC'. She started performing a strip show, and before you
knew it, she was toally naked - except for her sunglasses!
The
audience was going pretty crazy at this point, with people cheering and
clapping, and other people getting up and dancing wildly about, in what had
started as a pretty standard audiovisual presentation. The show was hilarious
to watch, and full of energy and humour - refreshing to see.
Next up on
the program, and by no means less engaging (although no on-stage shock tactics
were employed this time!) was a piece called 'CyberSpaceLand' by VJ Ubergeek,
backed up with music by DJ Donna Maya, both from the US. Ubergeek stood front
of stage, using a computer keyboard almost like a live instrument, a departure
from the familiar vision of computer nerd sitting partly obscured behind a
laptop.
Ubergeek
Sentences of text animated across the screen,
triggered by words typed into an on-line search engine. The myriad layers of
text became the aesthetic, and it was an interesting (if perhaps a little
cryptic) look at the language of web culture and personal on-line interaction.
A jam-packed first day of Sonar Art it was, and by the end of the
audiovisual concerts I was totally exhausted. I got out of Ubergeek's
presentation too late to catch the concert at the Auditori by Ryuichi Sakamoto
and Pansonic. It was a shame to have missed it, but I hadn't eaten for hours
and had some catching up to do with friends. And, later in the evening was the
press party at the Razzamattazz club where I made up for lost party-time and
enjoyed some live entertainment and a great live show by Roots Manuva.
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