MT COAST and QUICKSAILS both perform sets to mark the closing of the exhibition.
Doors at 7:30pm; music at 8pm.
FREE ADMISSION
ANDREW BARCO / MT COAST
PILOT:DRONE:COMMITTEE:TARGET
CURATED BY ESS STAFF
On July 1, 2016, in a gesture at transparency, the Obama administration released a dubious report on its use of drone strikes in areas outside of active conflict (meaning areas not in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Syria) between January 20, 2009 and December 31, 2015: 473 strikes that resulted in the deaths of 2372-2581 combatants, and 64-116 non-combatants. If one is to believe these figures, one might interpret the death ratio as a testament to the precision of the unmanned drone as an instrument of the war on terror. However, statisticians and independent media report that the numbers in this report represent only a fraction of the actual death toll exacted.
The silhouette of the predator drone has become a signifier of distrust in the government, of secrecy, of innovation and profit in the industries of destruction, and of the inhuman distance between destroyer and destroyed that is predominant in modern warfare. Enter The Androne—a semi-functional hurdy gurdy sculpted in the familiar form of a predator drone— the creation of artist ANDREW BARCO. (A hurdy gurdy is a drone instrument played by turning a crank to cause a rosined wheel to turn and vibrate an array of strings.) The Androne is a darkly humorous chimaera; the result of the unnatural fusion of an instrument of war with an instrument of music turns out to be an imperfect object that fully succeeds at neither function.
In composer MT COAST's companion audio piece, synthesized drones play against more chaotic sound, explosions sound near and far, and we hear the testimonies of the operators and victims of drone warfare. These sounds give way to periods of ecstatic, placid drone undisturbed by the sounds of war.
Pilot:Drone:Committee:Target serves as a meditation on the fleeting nature of hope during uncertain, inhumane times.
—Dan Mohr