An Inexplicable Hunger – flutist)body(flute (dis)encounters
Abstract
This doctoral research is structured by singular encounters, that happened between 2014 and 2018.
Together with a series of collaborators, I have developed a critical and poetic methodology through
what I call “mixture”, “contamination” and the practice of “un-goaling”, in which my “flutist-body-flute”
relation encounters the practices of other artists. A search for flexible modes of being a flutist, as a way
of working around a dominant characteristic of Western musical practices: what I call a fragmented
specialisation, or a specialised fragmentation.
A flute-body traverses a body-flutist, a pulsating: metamorphosis. A practice of metamorphosis
traversed my body-musician. It sowed a fragility, awoke a taste for a creating-in-mixture that also
traversed the transverse flute that keeps up with me. It stirred a mixture-experimentation flavour that
was already inside, but constrained. It aroused an inexplicable hunger. It taught me how to sustain the
time of an estrangement.
From the practice of metamorphosis, I imagined a mixture, a “mix-arts” as a method of artistic
investigation. I would mix art modalities. I would mix roles: interpretation, improvisation, composition.
I would mix “mine” with “yours” through co-creations. I would mix my body with a body-flute until it
becomes a “flutist-body-flute” relation.
Mixture as method grew out of my growing concern at being an expert at being an excerpt of
myself. Without being able to combine the practices that coexisted inside me, almost isolated, I searched
for a way to tune out a certain being-flutist, an image-inside that has guided my practices so far. But
the mixing did not happen in a random manner: it was guided by encounters. Encounters emerged as
method and structure; as a method for finding ways of de-anaesthetise the forces of creating, for finding
ways in which artistic creation is guided by a vulnerability to the other as a living presence.
The practices of co-creation/composition and performance have been translated into sound/video
and written essays, in a process of “deciphering” and “remembering”. Through this method, I claim that
each encounter sets the practices that will guide the mixture. These practices are as many as possible
encounters, and made sensible to the reader through the present dissertation.
Parts of work
Cyrino, Marina P. "Uma Fome Inexplicável". In Música, transversalidade. Felipe Amorim &
José Antônio Baêta Zille (eds). Belo Horizonte, MG : EdUEMG, 2017. pp.109-127.
(Série Diálogos com o Som. Ensaios ; v.4)
ISBN 978-85-5478-001-2
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy (in Fine Arts)
University
Göteborgs universitet. Konstnärliga fakulteten
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Fine, Applied and Performing Arts
Institution
Academy of Music and Drama ; Högskolan för scen och musik
Disputation
13:00 - Högskolan för scen och musik, Artisten, Fågelsången 1, Göteborg.
Date of defence
2019-04-03
marcyrino@gmail.com
Other description
The doctoral studies of Marina Pereira Cyrino were funded by CAPES Foundation,
Brazil.
The dissertation An Inexplicable Hunger – flutist)body(flute (dis)encounters contains a
book and ten sound/video essays.
View/ Open
Date
2019-03-18Author
Cyrino, Marina Pereira
Keywords
flute practices
flutist
performance
composition
improvisation
artistic research
musicianship
standardisation
specialisation
fragmentation
co-creation
collaborative processes
encounters
mixture
mixed practices
multimodal practices
metamorphosis
transdisciplinarity
transversality
flexible subjectivity
processual subjectivity
politics of subjectivation
otherness
othering
resonant body
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-7833-383-7
Language
eng