The Hubble ‘space opera’

3Q: Paola Prestini

Hubble image of the Orion Nebula, at 1,500 light-years away, the nearest star-forming region to Earth. The bright glow at upper left is from M43, a small region being shaped by a massive, young star's ultraviolet light.

Hubble image of the Orion Nebula, the nearest star-forming region to Earth.{credit}NASA, ESA, M. Robberto (Space Telescope Science Institute/ESA) and the Hubble Space Telescope Orion Treasury Project Team.{/credit}

In 2012, composer Paola Prestini began collaborating with astrophysicist Mario Livio — who worked at the Hubble Space Telescope’s operations centre from 1991 to 2015 — on a “space opera” celebrating the instrument’s 25th anniversary. The result, The Hubble Cantata, debuted on the telescope’s 26th. Performed on 6 August at the BRIC Celebrate Brooklyn! festival in New York City’s Prospect Park, it is a multidimensional paean to the ‘eye in the sky’, meshing Livio’s narration with performances by Norwegian orchestra 1B1, a 100-strong chorus and Metropolitan opera stars Jessica Rivera and Nathan Gunn, and a climax featuring a 3D virtual-reality (VR) experience incorporating Hubble images that allows viewers to drift through the Orion Nebula. Here Prestini talks about the joys and challenges of putting together a highly collaborative meld of science and art.

What inspired this project?

About four years ago, I was asked by the nonprofit Bay Chamber Concerts — who were in touch with Matt Mountain, then-head of Hubble operations centre the Space Telescope Science Institute — to create a piece commemorating the telescope’s legacy and anniversary. I began to read what Mario Livio had written on his blog, and after meeting, we began to pull together a loose narrative. With the librettist Royce Vavrek, I realised that Mario could become the inspiration for the opera’s main character. What emerged from our collaboration with Mario was a cantata drawing connections between human loss, love and sorrow, and the life cycle of a star. We decided that Mario would narrate and be the voice of the lead character, an astrophysicist who had lost his wife; there would be an adult choir, children’s choir and orchestra. No Hubble images would be used until the ending, which would culminate in a VR work exploring the beauty and depth of Hubble images. I began to record Livio, and that was the launch of the cooperation.

Of the performance

Dancer Wendy Whelan projected on a scrim at the debut performance of The Hubble Cantata; singers Jessica Rivera and Nathan Gunn can be seen behind.{credit}Sasha Arutyunova{/credit}

How does your composition incorporate science?

Both in its premise, of course, and in the technological underpinnings that have gone into creating it. I worked with sound designer Terence Caulkins from engineering firm Arup to create the 3D soundscape. To present the experience outdoors, in particular for the VR experience, we needed to create an immersive experience that gives the impression sounds are moving around and through the audience space. We mixed the music in a spatialized sound format called Ambisonics, which can be used for various loudspeaker layouts. For example, in its Soundlab Arup has a sphere of loudspeakers that allows you to place sounds around, above and below listeners to enhance the VR effect. Ambisonic sound can also be mixed down to “binaural”, which is a 360-degree sound format for headphones. (This is what people downloading our free app, Fistful of Stars, will hear.) For the performance, we designed a concentric eight-point loudspeaker system surrounding the audience. The electronic narration sequences include Mario speaking about everything from baryonic matter to extra-solar life. Filmmaker Eliza McNitt created the virtual-reality film in collaboration with the Endless Collective. This is a five-minute VR video that gives a 360-degree tour through space, comprising CGI-animated Hubble imagery of the Orion Nebula. We found a company to sponsor cardboard virtual-reality glasses for audience members.

What is it like for you as an artist to work with scientists?

Astrophysicist Mario Livio, composer Paola Prestini and librettist Royce Vavrek (L to R).

Astrophysicist Mario Livio, composer Paola Prestini and librettist Royce Vavrek (L to R).{credit}Jill Steinberg{/credit}

It’s great fun. It’s fascinating to think about our creative processes and how different they are. Mario has worked with the Baltimore Symphony as a narrator for performances, but never really deeply in a music collaborative process before this one. There’s a great deal of learning going on for all of us. He needed to trust that we were going to bring these massive concepts to fruition, so there was a lot of back and forth. He is able to explain super-complex concepts, such as dark matter, to musicians; setting these texts as simple narrations was important to me so that they could be clearly understood. Hubble’s legacy and what it has done for our understanding of the Universe is at the core of our drive to give it a musical life. The loss of communication between loved ones in the cantata storyline is echoed by the expansion of the Universe “at the rate of our imagination” (something Mario often says). Yet as the fictional astrophysicist’s understanding of the Universe deepens, he reconstructs his wife’s story and understands her better. Woven together, those twin threads in the piece — the rarity of life in the grand cosmic scene, and Hubble’s revelation of that scene — connect human and cosmic scenarios, revealing realities that may exist at vastly different scales, but that are each vastly important.

Interview by Jeff Tollefson, a reporter for Nature based in Washington DC. He tweets at @jefftollef.

Paola Prestini is currently in conversation with several producers in the United States and overseas about presenting The Hubble Cantata again. The piece will be released as a recording by VIA Records and as a short film by an as-yet unnanounced distributor.

 

For Nature’s full coverage of science in culture, visit www.nature.com/news/booksandarts.

An artist on Mars: Georgia O’Keeffe

From the Faraway, Nearby, 1937 (oil on canvas).

From the Faraway, Nearby, 1937 (oil on canvas). {credit}The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. Alfred Stieglitz Collection, 1959 © 2016 Georgia O’Keeffe Museum/ DACS, London. Photo: Malcom Varon ⓒ 2015. Image copyright The Metropolitan Museum of Art/ Art Resource/ Scala, Florence {/credit}

Jimson weed, a cow’s skull, bare mountainsides scored by flash floods: revelations of beauty in badlands mark the work of American artist Georgia O’Keeffe (1887-1986). This is ‘nature’ art from a Modernist sensibility — strong, simplified form shocked into being by a lush palette. O’Keeffe may once have been drawn to the dark hearts of flowers, but she became a desert geek par excellence, in love with geological strata and stripped skeletons in the Martian landscapes of New Mexico. “The bones,” she wrote, “seem to cut sharply to the center of something that is keenly alive on the desert even though it is vast and empty and untouchable”. Much as early nineteenth-century art of the sublime — in tandem with explosive discoveries in geology — shifted Europe’s responses to its own wilderness from repulsion to awe, O’Keeffe taught us to see new worlds in the New World.

Georgia O'Keeffe, 1918 (platinum print).

Georgia O’Keeffe, 1918 (platinum print).
{credit}Alfred Stieglitz {/credit}

As I’m reminded again and again at the eponymous show at London’s Tate Modern, this was an artist formidably focused on subjects not as an element in a composition but as the main event. Many pieces are like tightly cropped photographs. Her marriage to engineer-turned-photographer Alfred Stieglitz and friendships with his peers, such as Paul Strand, steeped her in the technology’s possibilities. Like them, O’Keeffe relished extreme close-ups and ‘long shots’ framed to emphasise form.

Her lifelong immersion in nature began on a Wisconsin dairy farm. The youthful O’Keeffe was encouraged in her bent towards art, studying at Chicago’s prestigious Art Institute School and the Art Students League in New York. In 1912 she ventured to west Texas for two years to teach art. Her aesthetic — severe and sinuous, hovering between abstract and representational — began to emerge as she exulted in the vivid geomorphology of Palo Duro canyon (a “lone place”, she noted approvingly) and experimented with watercolour. Back on the East Coast, she studied under the Japanese-influenced artist Arthur Wesley Dow, who emphasised abstract patterns and using the “facts of nature to express an idea or emotion”. She began to produce radical abstracts in charcoal, which would find their way to Stieglitz’s New York gallery and kickstart her career.

The charcoals on show at Tate Modern are powerful evocations of unrolling fern fronds or the intricate lace of a cloud. But in Red and Orange Streak (1919) O’Keeffe flexes different experimental muscles. The painting’s bold arc is a visual rendering of cattle lowing. O’Keeffe’s fascination with music and synaesthesia (which she shared with Wassily Kandinsky) played out in several works, whose many-layered, biomorphic shapes can be read as sonic motifs. In Blue and Green Music (1919/21), subtly shaded waves, ripples and bars surge like a visual symphony.

Blue and Green Music, 1919-21 (oil on canvas).

Blue and Green Music, 1919-21 (oil on canvas). {credit}The Art Institute of Chicago; Alfred Stieglitz Collection, gift of Georgia O’Keeffe, 1969 © The Art Institute of Chicago.{/credit}

O’Keeffe’s life in 1920s New York with Stieglitz was an exploration of urban canyonlands. She became a portrait painter of iconic skyscrapers, deploying stark chiaroscuro and a burgeoning command of form. But like a weed cracking the concrete jungle, nature breaks in. The lunar ‘eye’ in O’Keeffe’s New York Street with Moon (1925) gazes down through a jagged space between buildings at its brash mimics, a streetlamp and traffic light. There is always, in O’Keeffe, a search for an authentic source. The flower paintings (many executed upstate at idyllic Lake George) dive straight in — Oriental Poppies (1927) is a drenching in scarlet, orange and near-black. By working in extreme close-up in this and other pieces such as Dark Iris No I (1929), O’Keeffe frames floral anatomy as pure form. Few look at flowers, she noted, because “to see takes time”; her aim was to surprise the viewer into taking that time.

New York Street with Moon, 1925 (oil on canvas).

New York Street with Moon, 1925 (oil on canvas).{credit}Carmen Thyssen-Bornemisza Collection on loan at the Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid © 2016 Georgia O’Keeffe Museum/ DACS, London.{/credit}

O’Keeffe’s pull towards New Mexico began in 1929 and crystallised some two decades later, when she moved there permanently after Stieglitz’s death. Her house facing the flat-topped peak Pedernal (‘Flint Hill’) and the deserts round it became a crucible for her visionary ideas and creative energies. She immersed in landscape and skyscape, sleeping on the roof nights and walking, camping and working in her mobile studio, an ingeniously repurposed Ford Model A. The Southwest, not least New Mexico, had long been an artistic hotbed. But O’Keeffe held her own among illustrious contemporaries probing its riches, such as the great nature photographer Ansel Adams.

She became a connoisseur of bones, discovering their exquisite formal possibilities. Horse’s Skull on Blue (1931) displays its subject like a jewel on satin. Mule’s Skull with Pink Poinsettia (1936) is a Southwestern memento mori, one of many paintings juxtaposing blooms and animal skulls in a strange dialogue between life and death. Was she edging into Surrealism or commenting on the ecological calamity of the Dust Bowl then raging on America’s southern plains? That art-world debate hardly signifies. Despite their massive overexposure, these anatomic portraits seem perennially fresh. From the Faraway, Nearby (1937) fills the canvas with a complex interlacing of antlers sprouting from a deer’s skull; it rides over rolling hills like a multi-perspective meditation on the power of yearning.

Others in O’Keeffe’s New Mexican works play with echoes in organic and inorganic form. The cascades of wrinkled, torn and folded red sandstone in The Mountain, New Mexico (1931) and Black Mesa Landscape, New Mexico/Out Back of Marie’s II (1930) resemble vast piles of offal. And the avalanche of paintings she produced from 1936 to 1949 in ‘Black Place’ — the Bisti Badlands in Navajo territory — intently probe voids and masses in hills she compared to a “mile of elephants”.

Black Mesa Landscape, New Mexico / Out Back of Marie's II, 1930 (oil on canvas mounted on board).

{credit}Georgia O’Keeffe Museum. Gift of The Burnett Foundation © 2016 Georgia O’Keeffe Museum/ DACS, London.{/credit}

Georgia O’Keeffe is an engrossing encapsulation of this great Modernist’s work on the centenary of her first show. It cannot showcase the vast output of her 70-year career, but it does reveal how far she travelled. In the 1924 Celebration — a response to Equivalents, Stieglitz’s series of abstract cloudscapes  — she painted bulbous clouds in restless confusion, like goldfish in a jar. The show’s last painting, finished nearly four decades later, is Sky Above the Clouds III. Its aerial view of flattened cloudforms streaming out to the horizon is, I feel, O’Keeffe freed into the “faraway” — as she put it, “keeping the unknown always beyond”. After her long grappling with the primal in wild America, she was still out there discovering new worlds.

Georgia O’Keeffe runs at Tate Modern, Bankside, London SE1 9TG until 30 October.

 

For Nature’s full coverage of science in culture, visit www.nature.com/news/booksandarts.