Eufonic aims not to be just an exhibition space for new artistic proposals, but a meeting place between experienced creators, already trained artists and beginner creators: a training program with an intrinsic connection with the landscape of the Ebre Delta and its particularities, presenting a series of workshops aimed to already initiated artists and creators who seek to acquire new knowledge or improvement in their fields of interest and, on the other hand, at young and non-experienced adults. A meeting place with creativity and context as driving elements
At Eufònic Campus 2024, phonography and landscape will be discussed once again with a workshop that cannot be experienced outside the festival. The Canadian artist crys cole, who focuses all her attention on the delicate microsonic textures of the minimal sound environments that surround us, proposes to find the limits of audibility and intentionality in the territory. In this two-day workshop in collaboration with SGAE, the Berlin-based artist proposes to explore the possibilities offered by listening as a compositional tool; a listening that is attentive and committed to the most intimate and imperceptible sound dimension of the world as well as to the awareness and agency of the listener’s body. It will take place over two days: Thursday 11 and Friday 12 in several venues in the Ebro Delta.
Riccardo Massari, whom we may have heard in Gandesa interacting with a pianola, is a graduate of the Royal Conservatory of The Hague. He proposes a workshop on Saturday 13 July at 6 p.m. at the Centre d’Art Lo Pati for children, together with Maria Morera Casablancas, dedicated to musical composition with perforated paper, the technique on which the mechanical piano is based.
María Castellanos and Alberto Valverde, artists and technologists, focus their joint practice on the relationships between humans, non-humans and machines, focusing on the study of human sensory limits and the creation of complex interspecies communication systems between humans and plants. They will have spent two weeks working in the Delta and will present their experiences, the results and what they expect from all this on Friday 12 July at Escola d’Art i Cutlura de Tortosa at 10:10.
The siren calls of the rice cooperatives have marked the passage of time for many decades, and that of the Càmara is the last one to be preserved: recognised as Intangible Cultural Heritage, it is one of the few signs that reminds us that we live in a world that is still made to measure for us. Blanca Regina proposes a participative action on Friday 12th July at 6pm that will talk about what defines us as a community and the importance of preserving elements like this. All you need is your mobile phone.