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            Brandon LaBelle's works treat language and its enunciation, the act 
            of vocalization, language and speech, and the relationship between 
            the meaning of words and their function as sounds. Typical of his 
            approach is his 1998 piece <Writing Aloud> in which he recorded 
            the sounds of a pencil transcribing Roland Barthes' "Le plaisir 
            du texte. " In his works the text-as-object is written, spoken, 
            vocalized under difficult conditions, or typed in order to defamiliarize 
            and disassemble it. He has also done many readings, performances, 
            and installations inspired by literary works in poetry or prose. The 
            range of his work goes well beyond sound art to include more properly 
            musical activities as well as critical writing in art journals. 
             
            His contribution to this exhibition, entitled <Topophony of the 
            Text> takes as its sound source a reading of the last chapter of 
            Le plaisir du texte with all of the consonants removed to leave only 
            vowel sounds. The five vowels A, I, U, E, and O are all recorded separately 
            in different situations, grouped according to the five colors Rimbaud 
            suggested correspond to the vowels in his poem "Voyelle," 
            and broadcast from five speakers. The text is thus separated from 
            its original form and suspended far from its meaning to be converted 
            into an abstract sound. LaBelle's work is an operation in reducing 
            words, meaning, and sound to the material of the body. As such, it 
            is Barthes' pleasure put into practice. 
             
            I benefited in the writing of this text from many conversations with 
            the artists as well as direct and indirect communications via E-mail 
            and other means. I would also like to express my gratitude to the 
            music critic Mr. Sasaki Atsushi, who has worked to introduce the work 
            of these sound artists to Japan and also runs his own record label 
            "meme." Without their suggestions and guidance, this exhibition 
            would never have been possible. 
             
            (HATANAKA Minoru / Assistant Curator, ICC) 
             
             
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