-
Voicewriter
Meghan Trainor, 2010
Voicewriter is a site-specific work created during my recent residency at the James W. Washington, Jr. and Janie Rogella Washington Foundation in Seattle’s Central District.
Mr. Washington was a celebrated local artist best known for his stone sculpture celebrating natural forms. He was friends with Mark Tobey and a member of the “Northwest School” of painters during the mid-twentieth century. Over his long life he gave many talks on his philosophies of art, beginning with a presentation to African-American Navy men in 1945. During my residency I dove deep into the archives, listening to many of Mr. Washington’s recorded speeches, and in his vast library finding a unique annotation system that mapped very directly to his talks. Using a star system, along with various underlines and notations, Mr. Washington revealed the trajectory of his research rough these texts. Early in his life he worked as an electrician for the military, amongst many other jobs, and his fascination with gadgets is evident in his sizable collection of Edison Voicewriter devices. Having long worked with my recorded voice in my installation work I set about recording from Mr. Washington’s annotated texts onto wax cylinders.
The digitized recordings were then composed within Supercollider, a digital sound synthesis environment. Taking oak lampshades, another of Mr. Washington’s many collections of objects lingering throughout his vast work spaces, I constructed a form to house the wax cylinders, inset laser cut panels were generated using Grasshopper, a parametric plug-in for Rhino, a 3D modeling environment. Mr. & Mrs. Washington’s greenhouse became a listening chamber, housing both the audio composition created using his materials and tools, and the physical response to the greenhouse itself. -
Open Studio Party: August 26th
Thursday · 6:00pm - 10:00pm
1816 26th Ave. Seattle - James & Janie Washington Foundation
The James Washington Foundation invites you to an Open Studio Party Thursday, August 26th from 6 to 10 pm. I’ll be showing some of the archive related projects I’ve undertaken since starting my residency just a few short weeks ago, which includes works that combine site-specific materials and archival data with digital tools and fabrication processes. Live vinyl will be spinning in the side yard, culled from James Washington’s record collection.For one of the projects I’m working on, Voicewriter, I’ve taken a collection of a texts from Mr. Washington’s library and recorded them using the most functional of his collection of Edison voicewriters. Passages from books about Tesla and Carver, Einstein and systems of mass communication, the power of the mind and the use of sign language in ancient ritual.
The texts are not selected randomly, but respond to the very specific annotations that Mr. Washington used; underlines and stars and for the most critical texts, the phrase “important” appears again and again. His books are full of notes on cards and scraps of papers, and often articles clipped from newspapers that relate to the author or some event in the books.



