News Release

Breaking sonic boundaries: DARE Art Prize winner announced

Inaugural prize from Opera North and the University of Leeds

Grant and Award Announcement

University of Leeds

A composer working with sounds below the limits of human hearing has been announced as the winner of the inaugural £15,000 DARE Art Prize by Opera North and the University of Leeds' Cultural Institute. Samuel Hertz will spend the next year in collaboration with researchers at the University and Opera North staff in the creation of groundbreaking new work.

Following a classical training, Hertz's practice has expanded to involve a wide variety of media including modified and self-designed instruments, sensor technology, movement and dance. He has studied composition and electronic music with Pauline Oliveros, Fred Frith and Zeena Parkins, and has worked with Morton Subotnick and Alvin Curran, among others. He currently divides his time between Berlin and San Francisco. Hertz aims to work with a scientist from the University of Leeds on an electro-acoustic chamber piece, using transducers to produce low frequency sounds that can be felt rather than heard, and investigating the effects this might have on wellbeing and mood.

Aimed at challenging artists and scientists to work together on new approaches to the creative process, the launch of the annual Art Prize is part of a programme in celebration of the tenth anniversary of the DARE partnership between Opera North and the University of Leeds, which has become a globally recognised model for collaborations between the arts and higher education.

Applications were received from artists in all media from around the world, and the five-strong shortlist included proposals for a whale choir, an investigation of cosmic bubbles, and a piece using slime mould as a model for creative activity. The winning entry was selected by a panel comprising Opera North's Projects Director Dominic Gray, Professor John Ladbury, Executive Dean of the Faculty of Biological Sciences at the University of Leeds, and Nicola Stephenson, Exhibitions and Projects Producer at Harewood House, Leeds.

Samuel Hertz, winner of the first DARE Art Prize, said: "I am honoured and excited by this opportunity to work with the University of Leeds and Opera North in an investigation of the sonic and bodily relations between humans and the environment. I expect this year will be enlightening and productive both for my practice, and the practices of my collaborators in our joint expedition into the drama of the unheard realm of infrasound. I'm very thankful for this opportunity to work with the people and resources from both institutions, and cannot wait to begin."

Nicola Stephenson, Exhibitions and Projects Producer at Harewood House and a former Public Art Project Officer at the University, said: "Sitting on the selection panel was stimulating, fun and thought-provoking. Every one of the shortlisted candidates challenged the panel to think in new and sometimes quite extraordinary ways about all sorts of subjects ranging from biology, technology, astronomy and non-human communication. All demonstrated a real thirst to learn from and collaborate with the University's scientists.

"The DARE Prize is both a leap of faith and imagination and a belief that extraordinary things can emerge when different disciplines provoke questions and insights which might otherwise lie dormant. I am excited to see what emerges."

Dominic Gray, Projects Director, Opera North, added: "Opera North is really excited to be working with Samuel Hertz on what promises to be an amazing exploration. For an opera company there is something particularly intriguing about the potential impact of sounds that lie outside the limits of human hearing. What worlds might be there and what stories might unfold in this mysterious landscape?"

Professor Frank Finlay, Executive Dean of the University's Faculty of Arts, Humanities and Cultures, said: "The DARE Prize is the latest in a long line of innovative initiatives which have emanated from the pioneering partnership between the University of Leeds and Opera North. It is a wonderful way to mark the second decade of our exciting collaboration.

"Promoting radically interdisciplinary investigations is one of the aims of the University's new Cultural Institute: taking risks, catalysing connections and generating new knowledge. Samuel Hertz's proposal, I am sure, will take us on a fascinating voyage of discovery."

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The collaborative process will begin in the spring with a DARE 'Sandpit' , bringing together a broad spectrum of academics, experts and artists around Samuel Hertz to present provocations and discuss related research, experience and opinion. The outcome of the year-long collaboration between artist and scientist will be revealed in March 2018.

For more information on the DARE Prize and the partnership, visit dareyou.org.uk


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