WGXC-90.7 FM
WGXC Feedback: Mendi and Keith Obadike
Sep 12, 2015: 9am - 10:30 am
Wave Farm Radio
wavefarm.org 1620-AM | Simulcast mid-6 a.m. and Saturdays on WGXC 90.7-FM.
https://wavefarm.org/listen
90.7-FM in NY's Upper Hudson Valley and wgxc.org/listen everywhere
http://www.wgxc.org/
Produced by Various.
Mendi and Keith Obadike have a show called "Numbers Station [Furtive Movements]," a
performance and installation of sound and objects through Oct. 10 at the Ryan Lee Gallery in New York that employs the radical misuse of the data that reduces Black bodies to numbers.
Numbers Station [Furtive Movements] is the first in a new series of works originally conceived
in 2010 that utilizes the structure of numbers stations- mysterious shortwave radio broadcasts
used to transmit clandestine information by a single voice reading a series of cryptic numbers,
punctuated by electronic sounds and music. Blurring the lines between music and information
and between public and private communication, the Numbers Station series addresses the
cerebral appeal made by data (a tally of bodies in official records) against the visceral reality of
violence. Other Numbers Station projects engage with lynching statistics assembled by Ida B.
Wells and numbers from slave ship manifests.
The exhibition is preceded by a 30-minute performance conducted at the gallery on the eve
of the opening. Using a radio transmitter and tone generators, the artists will read a series of
numbers culled from the self-reported Stop-and-Frisk data of 123 New York Police Department
precincts. The numbers exist as the material, the subject, and the score of the work: the artists’
voices and fragmented music tones are processed, broadcast, and played back in real-time
during the performance and later as a recording for the duration of the exhibition.
Mendi + Keith Obadike make music, art, and literature. Mendi (b. 1973, Palo Alto, CA) and
Keith (b. 1973, Nashville, TN) began working together in 1996, creating conceptual Internet art
and text-sound work before introducing sound installation into their oeuvre. They developed
an intermedia practice working on themes of social filters, citizenship, and coding. Their work
has been commissioned by The Kitchen, New York; New Museum of Contemporary Art, New
York; Whitechapel Art Gallery, London; Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; and
the Center for Black Music Research, Chicago, among other institutions. They have exhibited
widely at Centro Cultural de Merida Olimpo, Merida, MX; Danish Film Institute, Copenhagen;
International Center for Photography, New York; MIT’s List Visual Art Center, Boston; Museum
of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; Museum of Modern Art, New York; Neuberger Museum of
Art, Purchase; and The Studio Museum in Harlem, New York.