Whitney Biennial 2024

2024

A grand piano illuminated by a single spotlight against a dark background.

Nikita Gale: My name's Nikita Gale. I’m an artist.

Narrator: Gale discusses her work, Tempo Rubato

Nikita Gale: It's a player piano that has been programmed to silently play back a series of piano performances by various pop musicians.

I started out with this question, that has been an ongoing question in my practice, around what is performance? How is it defined as a cultural object? And I became really curious over the course of my research about this notion of sound or music as property. As property that can be licensed, as property that can be legally protected. And yet it's the product of, typically, an immense amount of labor, a lot of which there are no set legal protections for.

I started looking at the player piano as this object that was interesting in the sense that it was able to record not just a performance, but it was able to record the traces of labor and work that go into translating a score, for example, into musical sound. The player piano was a really fantastic tool for this because you're able to mute it so that you are not hearing or you don't have access to the musical parts of the performance. You are just encountering the mechanical machinery, the trace of the recorded playing of the keys.

What I've discovered, after having numerous conversations with various representatives and VPs in licensing at ASCAP I started to recognize that there isn't really a set of rules that guide or protect just the traces or the labor of the mechanisms of the performance of the work.

So there are a number of ideas at play in the piece. It's not one specific thing, but one of the central ideas is this idea of thinking of labor as property, thinking of sound as property, and recognizing this disconnect. Because in my mind, it feels like there's so much being left on the table legally for artists, particularly musicians, when there aren't defined rules about protecting that particular aspect of performance.


Nikita Gale, TEMPO RUBATO (STOLEN TIME), 2023-24. Modified player piano, audio, and LED lighting system. Collection of the artist; courtesy Commonwealth and Council, Los Angeles and Mexico City; Petzel, New York; Emalin, London; and 56 Henry, New York. © Nikita Gale

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On the Hour

A 30-second online art project:
Frank WANG Yefeng, The Levitating Perils #2

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