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art's birthday - pigeon song 17jan2010 - pigeons, wires, song |
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| This photo was taken at the Murray Road overpass on Hwy 26, just west of Portland, Oregon. It's Sunday morning, 17 January 2010, and art is 1,000,047. From the perspective that I first saw them, the pigeons had arrayed themselves along the top three of five wires that ran across the south section of the ramp. They appeared to me to be presenting a tune for art’s birthday. |
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| In an attempt to decode the tune, I first assigned a value to the various head positions - tucked, straight up or leaning (surprisingly, if leaning, their heads all tilted in the same direction).One was in flight. |
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| I then made a couple alterations using a graphic editor to get the photo to more closely represent a staff.This was fairly easy to do since the pigeons had already chosen a five-wire/line location. |
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| I next tried to assign note values to the birds’ positions. I at first thought whole notes for the tucked/hunched birds, an eighth note for the leaning (like the flag on an eighth), etc. but that made it all seem a bit drawn out and dirge-like. I instead bumped it up such that the bird in flight became a half note, the tucked/hunched birds were quarter notes, the leaners were eighths and the straight-ups were assigned a value of a sixteenth. I’m not that great at figuring rests, ties and all so I got it as close as I could on a basic treble staff (being birds I figured they’d go for the higher line work rather than the lower). |
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| Once I had the tune, generated in the same little program that allowed me to generate the score, I then processed the sound file, removing rests and spaces, to get it to more closely match the original photo. I did the same to the staff. It now looks more like a Satie score. It sounds a bit like one as well. |
The tune: |
| if no player appears you might try this link to play or download the file > pigeon song |
| Happy birthday, art. Thank you, pigeons. |
| An annual event, 'Art's Birthday' was first proposed in 1963 by the artist Robert Filliou. He suggested that 1,000,000 years ago, there was no art. One day, the 17th of January to be precise, Art was born when, according to Filliou, someone dropped a dry sponge into a bucket of water. |
| block drop for art's birthday 2011 |
| sculpture for art's birthday 2009 |
| sculpture for art's birthday 2008 |
| sculpture for art's birthday 2007 |
| back to sculpture page |
| © jamie newton |