{"id":5760,"date":"2025-04-30T12:07:27","date_gmt":"2025-04-30T10:07:27","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/?p=5760"},"modified":"2026-03-16T15:38:43","modified_gmt":"2026-03-16T14:38:43","slug":"free-of-the-canvas-concerning-two-sound-works-by-richard-winther-and-gunnar-aagaard-andersen-in-the-smk-sound-archive","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/free-of-the-canvas-concerning-two-sound-works-by-richard-winther-and-gunnar-aagaard-andersen-in-the-smk-sound-archive\/","title":{"rendered":"Free of the Canvas <\/br> Concerning two sound works by Richard Winther and Gunnar Aagaard Andersen in the SMK sound archive"},"content":{"rendered":"<h2>Prelude<\/h2>\n<p>In a 1971 radio interview, Richard Winther described a pivotal encounter with artist Gunnar Aagaard Andersen at the gates of the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts one day in 1948 or 1949. Winther, by his own account \u2018completely over the moon\u2019, shared with Aagaard Andersen an idea he had just conceived: the notion that the \u2018Constructive\u2019 paintings they were working on at the time would be wonderfully suited to being played on a barrel organ.<sup id=\"footnote-1\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"1\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"Buck 1971, 20 min 46 sec. Winther does not mention when the meeting took place, but it must be in 1948 or the first half of 1949, as Aagaard Andersen\u2019s <em>Concerto for Five Violins and an Overhead Projector<\/em>, which was based on Winther\u2019s idea, premiered in September 1949.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">1<\/a><\/sup> The link between the paintings\u2019 rhythmic series of fields and lines, evenly distributed across the picture plane, and the perforated paper strips used by barrel organs does indeed seem obvious once you have made the connection across art forms.<\/p>\n<h2>Initial problem statement<\/h2>\n<p>The artists\u2019 association Linien II, of which Winther and Aagaard Andersen were key figures, paved the way for an cross-media return of concrete art in Denmark in the years after the Second World War. As art historian Mikkel Bogh writes in volume 9 of <em>Ny Dansk Kunsthistorie<\/em> (New Danish Art History) from 1996, this was a return where the interest was not primarily \u2018directed towards materiality. On the contrary, the inclusion of the most diverse materials was justified by a gestural approach that allowed the artists to jump from one medium to the next\u2019.<sup id=\"footnote-2\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"2\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"Mikkel Bogh: <em>Ny Dansk Kunsthistorie. Bind 9: Geometri og bev\u00e6gelse <\/em>(New Danish Art History. Volume 9: Geometry and Movement), Copenhagen 1996, p. 29.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">2<\/a><\/sup> However, one medium seems to evade Bogh\u2019s otherwise keen gaze: sound. In what follows, I will focus on how, in the years 1948\u201349, several of the artists from Linien II also experimented with relocating their artistic endeavours into the medium of sound. The mischievous silliness of Winther\u2019s barrel organ analogy in itself can be said to demonstrate the playful ease with which an artistic idea could be shuffled around between different media. The invisibility of sound in art history writing is symptomatic, and with this article I hope to contribute to inviting closer art historical scrutiny of sound in order to provide a more multifaceted picture of a Danish art scene that, then as well as now, has a soundtrack.<sup id=\"footnote-3\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"3\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"The sound works are often mentioned as an anomaly and something of a curiosity in connection with Linien II\u2019s media experiments, although it seems as if only a few of the art historians who mention them have actually heard the works. An important exception is Jens J\u00f8rgen Thorsen, who describes having attended the performance of Aagaard Andersen\u2019s work and listening to the two lacquer discs in 1949 (Jens J\u00f8rgen Thorsen: <em>Modernisme i dansk kunst specielt efter 1940 <\/em>(Modernism in Danish Art, Especially After 1940), Copenhagen 1965, pp. 128\u2013131). The release of the album <em>Linien II. 1948-49<\/em>, Institut for Dansk Lydark\u00e6ologi, Copenhagen 2021, specifically aimed at making it possible to hear the works. Since 2012, visitors have also been able to hear a digitised version of Museum Jorn\u2019s set of records in SMK\u2019s permanent exhibition of Danish and international art after 1900. However, the digitisation was of such poor quality that it was difficult to form a fair impression of the works.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">3<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>By listening more closely to the works <em>Machine Symphony No. 2 <\/em>(called <em>Maskinsymfoni no. 2 <\/em>in Danish), 1948 by Richard Winther, and <em>Concerto for Five Violins and an Overhead Projector <\/em>(Danish: <em>Koncert for fem violiner og et lysbilledapparat<\/em>), 1949 by Gunnar Aagaard Andersen, the present article aims to show how the artists could make the leap from visual to sonic media and to argue why these works should be heard as part of Danish art history. Thus, the article is also the first step on the way to establishing an initial listening position couched in (visual) art history, a position which forms the starting point for my ongoing PhD project with the working title <em>Dansk lydkunsts historier \u2013 Histories of Danish Sound Art<\/em>.<sup id=\"footnote-4\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"4\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"This article builds on analyses from my article \u2018Linien fri af l\u00e6rredet. Om Linien II\u2019s lydeksperimenter fra 1948\u201349\u2019 (Releasing the Line from the Canvas. On Linien II\u2019s Sound Experiments from 1948-49) in the album release <em>Linien II. 1948\u201349<\/em>, Institut for Dansk Lydark\u00e6ologi, 2021. The present article continues the work and reflects on the reception of said LP release, where issues pertaining to the works\u2019 affiliation became a central topic of discussion: Are these works music or visual art? See Michael Fjelds\u00f8e: \u2018Linien II\u2019s lydeksperimenter er musik\u2019 (\u2018Linien II\u2019s sound experiments are music), in <em>Seismograf, <\/em>17 September 2022, [Accessed 1 February 2024] <a href=http:\/\/www.seismograf.org\/artikel\/linien-iis-lydeksperimenter-er-musik target=_blank rel=noopener>http:\/\/www.seismograf.org\/artikel\/linien-iis-lydeksperimenter-er- music <\/a>, and Magnus Kaslov, \u2018Nej, Linien II\u2019s lydeksperimenter er billedkunst1\u2019 (No, Linien II&#8217;s sound experiments are visual art!), in <em>Seismograf, <\/em>4 November 2022, [Accessed 1 February 2024] www.seismograf.org\/artikel\/nej-linien-iis-lydeksperimenter-er-billedkunst .\nThe overall objective of the PhD project is to address and describe how Danish visual artists have worked with sound, based on the materials available in the SMK sound archive. The underlying thesis of the project is that Danish visual artists have arrived at working with sound by way of very different paths, and that the sound works are best understood as a situated part of the artists\u2019 general practices and thus as part of the general history of art, rather than by taking as its point of departure a separate, media-specific history of sound art. The article\u2019s initial establishment of an art historical listening position will, in future articles and in the thesis itself, be expanded upon, interrogated and reflected upon through conversations and comparisons with other works and recordings in the SMK sound archive.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">4<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_5756\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-5756\" style=\"width: 1558px\" class=\"wp-caption alignnone\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-5756 size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/20080422-083425-5_24Mb-1.jpg\" alt=\"Linien II fotograferet i deres f\u00f8rste f\u00e6llesudstilling i Tokanten i K\u00f8benhavn, 1947. Fra venstre: Ib Geertsen, Richard Winther, Bamse Kragh-Jacobsen (\u00f8verst), Niels Macholm. Foto: Vittus Nielsen, Scanpix.\" width=\"1558\" height=\"2048\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/20080422-083425-5_24Mb-1.jpg 1558w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/20080422-083425-5_24Mb-1-289x380.jpg 289w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/20080422-083425-5_24Mb-1-822x1080.jpg 822w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/20080422-083425-5_24Mb-1-768x1010.jpg 768w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/20080422-083425-5_24Mb-1-1169x1536.jpg 1169w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 1558px) 100vw, 1558px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-5756\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Fig. 1.<\/strong> Linien II photographed \u00a0in their first exhibition at Tokanten in Copenhagen, 1947. From left to right they are: Ib Geertsen, Richard Winther, Bamse Kragh-Jacobsen (at the top), Niels Macholm. Photo: Vittus Nielsen, Scanpix.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<h2>The circumstances surrounding the creation of the works<\/h2>\n<p>In 1948, both Richard Winther and Gunnar Aagaard Andersen were members of the artists\u2019 association Linien II, which had loudly and proudly made its mark on the Danish art scene with something of a mixed bag of a group exhibition at the exhibition venue and bar Tokanten in 1947 [<strong>Fig. 1<\/strong>]. The members of Linien II posited the group as an extension of the kind of Constructivism with which the artist association Linien \u2013 hence the name \u2013 had attracted considerable attention in the years between 1934 and 1939. The affinities between the two became more evident in two exhibitions arranged at Den Frie Udstillingsbygning in 1948 and 1949, where the common mode of expression and Linien II\u2019s artistic position were streamlined, becoming focused manifestations of Concrete art accompanied by braggingly grandiose dismissals of other artistic endeavours.<sup id=\"footnote-5\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"5\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"For example: \u2018Danish abstract art is dying, ebbing out in a masked impressionism, drooling with emotions, that fumbles around in the chaotic wilderness of its spontaneity. our exhibition is necessary to eliminate this error.\u2019 Translated from Richard Winther et al.: \u2018introduktion til liniens udstilling\u2019 (\u2018Introduction to linien\u2019s exhibition\u2019 in Morten Sabroe and Richard Winther (eds.): <em>liniens udstilling 1948 i den frie udstillings bygning 31 juli \u2013 15 august<\/em>, Copenhagen 1948, no page nos.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">5<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>After Winther and Aagaard Andersen\u2019s meeting by the gates of the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, Winther set about constructing a sound machine that, based on converted electric doorbells, was to realise the idea of playing back the paintings as sound. However, by his own admission Aagaard Andersen grew impatient and embarked on an alternative human-machine solution: based on the imagery from a series of around fifty paintings from 1947\u201349, all examining the same principle of construction, he executed a series of graphic scores that he persuaded five student violinists from the Royal Danish Academy of Music to perform.<sup id=\"footnote-6\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"6\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"Buck 1971, 2 min 40 sec.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">6<\/a><\/sup> The result was the work <em>Concerto for Five Violins and an Overhead Projector<\/em> from 1949, where the role of the slide projector was to project the graphic score onto a wall while the five violins (violinists) performed the \u2018pictures\u2019 from the score.<sup id=\"footnote-7\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"7\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"Aagaard Andersen uses the term \u2018pictures\u2019 in, for example, the printed sheet music used by the five violinists, excerpts of which can be found in the Museum of Contemporary Art&#8217;s archive. In the interview with Ole (Buck 1971), he also refers to the pieces as both \u2018pieces\u2019 and \u2018movements\u2019.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">7<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>The year before, as part of the preparations for the exhibition at Den Frie Udstillingsbygning due to open on 31 July 1948, Richard Winther explored another way of working with sound as a concrete material: as a sound recording cut into a lacquer disc. Winther had rented time in the privately owned music studio Wifos at Nyvej 6 in Frederiksberg, and alongside fellow artists from Linien II, Hans \u2018Bamse\u2019 Kragh-Jacobsen and Niels Macholm, he recorded two previously rehearsed pieces. One was his own <em>Machine Symphony No. 2<\/em>), while the other was <em>Bruitist Concerto No. 1<\/em> (Danish: <em>Bruitistisk koncert nr. 1<\/em>) by Krag-Jacobsen.<sup id=\"footnote-8\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"8\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"In his diary entries about the recording of the first record on 7 July 1948, Richard Winther states that he covered the expenses, that the original cost DKK 20, and that \u2018copies\u2019 cost DKK 16. It seems reasonable to assume that several copies may have existed and possibly still exist. Richard Winther: untitled [diary entries] unpublished, unnumbered. Hereafter referred to as Winther, diary entries, no page nos. Richard Winther\u2019s diary entries have been kindly made available by Tobias Winther.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">8<\/a><\/sup> A year later, in August 1949, the same group with the addition of painter Ib Geertsen recorded another record featuring the two works <em>Bruitist Improvisation <\/em>(Danish: <em>Bruitistisk improvisation<\/em>) by Winther on one side and an untitled sound poem by Geertsen on the other. <sup id=\"footnote-9\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"9\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"In the 1971 interview, Winther does not mention when the meeting at the academy gate took place, so whether the barrel organ idea also precedes both recordings must remain a matter of conjecture. (Buck 1971). The 1948 record and the 1949 record were both played at the events at Politikens Hus in September 1949, but it also appears from the exhibition catalogue that the first record featuring the works of Winther and Krag-Jacobsen was included in Linien II\u2019s exhibition at Den Frie Udstillingsbygning the year before in the summer of 1948, presumably installed on a gramophone in one of the exhibition galleries. The exhibition catalogue mentions: \u2018The radio gramophone (Model: Arkitekt) on display is from FONA\u2019. Sabroe, Morten and Winther 1948, no page nos.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">9<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>It would seem that the premiere of Aagaard Andersen\u2019s concert took place at Charlottenborg on one of the last days of August or early September 1949 as part of an all-night programme that also included performances of an opera by Henrik Buch, readings of sound poems, screenings of Winther\u2019s experimental film, and playback of the works on the two lacquer discs. In other words, the evening presented quite a large number of works that used sound in one way or another.<sup id=\"footnote-10\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"10\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"Thorsen 1965, pp. 128\u2013130. The work in question is probably <em>Abstrakt teater<\/em> (Abstract Theatre), 1948, which Henrik Buch also showed at Linien II\u2019s exhibition at Den Frie Udstillingsbygning in 1948. The work features a small puppet theatre-like stage, where some cut-out shapes in various colours moved around to the accompaniment of a piano, while Buch, a trained opera singer, sang the libretto. The poems performed may be the same as those printed in the catalogue for the exhibition in 1949 by Mertz, Krag Jacobsen, Winther, Geertsen and Aagaard Andersen.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">10<\/a><\/sup> The event was also repeated on 5 and 6 September in Danish newspaper Politiken\u2019s lecture hall.<\/p>\n<p>Today, the SMK sound archive contains Richard Winther\u2019s two original lacquer discs, deposited by Winther himself, as well as copies of the graphic scores for Gunnar Aagaard Andersen\u2019s <em>Concerto for Five Violins and an Overhead Projector<\/em>, deposited by Aagaard Andersen&#8217;s widow Grete Aagaard Andersen. It also houses contextualising materials in in the form of notes from Winther and an interview with Grethe Aagaard Andersen conducted by artist and archive creator William Louis S\u00f8rensen.<\/p>\n<h2>About the SMK sound archive<\/h2>\n<p>The SMK sound archive was established in just one year in 1991\u201392 by artist William Louis S\u00f8rensen, who, at the behest of curator Elisabeth Delin Hansen, was brought in under the auspices of an employment promotion scheme with his only task being to collect this archive. The archive comprises works in the form of original media with sound and in some cases also visual components, scores and sketches supplemented with explanatory and contextualising material in the form of photo, video and audio documentation of works, performances, catalogues, articles, correspondence, and interviews conducted by Louis S\u00f8rensen with the aim of including them in the archive. A number of questions arise about the circumstances of the archive: its creation and purpose, the fact that an artist actively took part in the collecting effort, and the fact that no budget had been allocated for the collection activities.<sup id=\"footnote-11\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"11\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"Birgitte Thorsen Vilslev points out that similar financial conditions applied to the collecting activities for the film archive established the year before, in 1990, with the rationale that the film copies were not considered original works and that the artists were therefore not remunerated. Birgitte Thorsen Vilslev: <em>Autentiske kopier. Reproducerbarhed og intermediale experimenter i dansk avantgardefilm 1942\u20131972 <\/em>(Authentic copies. Reproducibility and intermedial experiments in Danish avant-garde film 1942\u20131972), Copenhagen 2021, p. 13.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">11<\/a><\/sup> The main focus of the archive is clearly work with sound carried out by visual artists, but it also contains materials with a clear anchoring in other aesthetic fields \u2013 such as practices from the realms of experimental poetry, music, and theatre.<\/p>\n<h2>Theoretical and institutional positioning<\/h2>\n<p>Overall, visual art practices that use sound have found limited reception. What attention has been paid has come from two different sides: on the one hand, sound has been regarded as one medium among the many so-called \u2018new media\u2019 that began to receive serious institutional attention internationally and in Denmark during the 1980s and 1990s. The fact that SMK set up a film archive in 1990\u201391 and a sound archive in 1991\u201392 should in itself be considered an example of the institutional attention to new media, as should the founding of the Museum of Contemporary Art in Roskilde, which had new media, including sound, as a special area of responsibility. From another partially overlapping area, certain artistic practices, especially since the end of the 1990s and 2000s, have been the subject of inter-disciplinary comparisons and links with other sound practices, such as experimental music practices, as part of the establishment of so-called sound art as a concept and an independent field.<sup id=\"footnote-12\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"12\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"There is no consensus as to whether so-called sound art is to be considered a kind of musical genre, an \u2018other\u2019 of music, a hybrid aesthetic field in the overlap between visual art and music, or an independent art form separate from both visual art and music. A reception-related mixing of practices from the fields of music and art goes back further than the now relatively widely used, albeit still undefined, concept of sound art. Exhibitions such as <em>Sehen um H\u00f6ren<\/em> (St\u00e4dt. Kunsthalle D\u00fcsseldorf, 1975, <em>F\u00fcr Augen und Ohren<\/em> (Akademie der K\u00fcnste, 1980) and <em>Broken Music<\/em> (daadgallerie Berlin mf, 1989) appear to be central influences in the establishment of an interdisciplinary genealogy for so-called sound art across music and visual art. For an overview of theory formation in the field, see Andreas Engstr\u00f6m and Asa Stjerna: &#8216;Sound Art or Klangkunst? A reading of the German and English literature on sound art\u2019 in <em>Organised Sound<\/em>, 14(01), 2009, pp. 11\u201318, and for a critical treatment of the many attempts at diagrammatic representations of the genealogy of so-called sound art, see Lauren Rosati: \u2018Mapping the Field of Sound Art: Ren\u00e9 Block\u2019s Diagrammatic Modernism\u2019 in <em>Leonardo,<\/em> 55 (5), 2022, pp. 521\u2013529.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">12<\/a><\/sup> The discourse surrounding so-called sound art has mainly taken place in the context of the relatively new interdisciplinary academic field \u2018Sound Studies\u2019 and should still be considered a work in progress, as there has never been any consensus on what the concept of sound art covers or how the field is defined.<sup id=\"footnote-13\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"13\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"Almost all attempts at surveys of so-called sound art articulate this lack of consensus. For a recent example, see Holger Schultze and Sanne Krogh Groth: \u2018Sound Art. The First 100 Years of an Aggressively Expanding Art Form\u2019 in Holger Schultze and Sanne Krogh Groth (eds.): <em>The Bloomsbury Handbook of Sound Art<\/em>, New York 2022, which on page 18 firmly attempts to establish that \u2018Sound art exists.\u2019\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">13<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>The historiography of and theorising about so-called sound art has often had an idiosyncratic focus on what Brian Kane has critically called the onto-aesthetics of sound art: works that, cutting across genres of music and art, can be said to address the material, ontological, and phenomenological aspects of sound and listening.<sup id=\"footnote-14\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"14\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"Brian Kane: \u2018Sound studies without auditory culture: a critique of the ontological turn\u2019, in <em>Sound Studies<\/em>, 1:1, 2015, pp. 2\u201321. Kane directs his criticism against a trend in the discourse around so-called sound art, exemplified in three specific texts: Christoph Cox: \u2018Beyond Representation and Signification: Toward a Sonic Materialism\u2019, in <em>Journal of Visual Culture<\/em>, 10(2), 2011, pp. 145\u2013161. Steve Goodman: <em>Sonic Warfare: Sound, Affect, and the Ecology of Fear<\/em>, Cambridge 2009. Greg Hainge: <em>Noise Matters: Towards an Ontology of Noise<\/em>, New York 2013.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">14<\/a><\/sup> In addition to Kane, figures such as Marie Thompson, Gustavus Stadler, Dylan Robinson, and to some extent Seth Kim-Cohen have raised criticism of the onto-aesthetic focus and its inherent problems.<sup id=\"footnote-15\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"15\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"Marie Thompson: \u2018Whiteness and the Ontological Turn in Sound Studies\u2019, in <em>Parallax <\/em>, 23(3), 2017, pp. 266\u2013282; Gustavus Stadler, \u2018On Whiteness and Sound Studies\u2019, <em>Sounding Out! <\/em>, 2015 [Accessed 10 June 2024] <a href=https:\/\/soundstudiesblog.com\/2015\/07\/06\/on-whiteness-and-sound-studies target=_blank rel=noopener>https:\/\/soundstudiesblog.com\/2015\/07\/06\/on-whiteness-and-sound-studies <\/a>; Dylan Robinson: <em>Hungry Listening. Resonant Theory for Indigenous Sound Studies<\/em>, Minneapolis 2020; Seth Kim-Cohen: <em>In the Blink of an Ear. Toward a Non-Cochlear Sonic Art<\/em>, London 2009.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">15<\/a><\/sup> It is beyond the focus and scope of this article to provide an in-depth account of the problems associated with the theorising and historicising of so-called sound art, but to simplify matters greatly, the dominant interdisciplinary, material onto-aesthetic focus feels narrow and has resulted in a delimitation of the field for so-called sound art which does not match the many different ways sound has been \u2013 and still is \u2013 used by visual artists.<\/p>\n<p>In connection with the release of the LP <em>Linien II 1948\u201349<\/em>, which collected the four works from the lacquer discs and the later recording of the<em> Concerto for Five Violins and an Overhead Projector,<\/em> a public discussion arose that seems symptomatic of some of the problems associated with the interdisciplinary discourse around so-called sound art. With the article \u2018Linien II\u2019s lydeksperimenter er musik\u2019 (Linien II\u2019s sound experiments are music), professor of musicology Michael Fjelds\u00f8e raised a discussion about whether the works belonged to the field of music history. I responded with the article \u2018Nej, Linien II\u2019s lydeksperimenter er billedkunst!\u2019 (No, Linien II&#8217;s sound experiments are visual art!), in which I argued that to consider the works in a music-historical context rather than an art-historical one would be missing out on something central.<sup id=\"footnote-16\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"16\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"Fjelds\u00f8e 2022; Kaslov 2022.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">16<\/a><\/sup> The present article pursues the argument that being aware of the works\u2019 institutional affiliation with an art-historical tradition causes some central aspects of the works to come to the fore. First and foremost of these is how they seek to expand and challenge the conventions of visual art. These are aspects that you risk overlooking if you apply a close material focus on the sound and the properties of sound, which might perhaps otherwise be regarded as an obvious part of the wider discourse around the so-called sound art or, as Fjelds\u00f8e suggests, if one reads them within the scope and tradition of the history of music.<\/p>\n<p>In terms of theory and method, the present article thus takes its position within an institutional understanding of the art field, applying it as a central lens for how, ever since the advent of the historical avant-garde \u2013 meaning for more than 100 years now \u2013 artists have included non-traditional materials and media in a continued probing and expansion of what the category of art can include. In <em>The Theory of the Avant-Garde <\/em>from 1974, Peter B\u00fcrger\u2019s basic thesis is that \u2018with the historical avant-garde movements, the social subsystem that is art enters the stage of self-criticism.\u2019<sup id=\"footnote-17\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"17\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"Peter B\u00fcrger: <em>The Theory of the Avant-Garde<\/em>, Minneapolis 1984, p. 22.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">17<\/a><\/sup> The avant-garde\u2019s attack on the art institution failed, according to B\u00fcrger, but \u2018the attack did make art recognisable as an institution.\u2019<sup id=\"footnote-18\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"18\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"B\u00fcrger 1984, p. 57.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">18<\/a><\/sup> The conglomerate of the art institution\u2019s various conditional parts, which B\u00fcrger calls a social sub-system, Arthur Danto summarised ten years earlier with the collective term \u2018artworld\u2019. Danto applies the institutionalist perspective that \u2018to see something as art requires something the eye cannot decry \u2013 an atmosphere of artistic theory, a knowledge of the history of art: an artworld.\u2019<sup id=\"footnote-19\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"19\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"Arthur Danto: \u2018The Artworld\u2019 in <em>The Journal of Philosophy,<\/em> 61(19), 1964, p. 580.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">19<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>This theoretical perspective allows what could be termed the social horizon of the works to come into view and showcases how they are situated in the practices of Winther and Aagaard Andersen, who build, in a highly well-informed and self-aware manner, directly on visual artistic practices and groupings found within the modernist and avant-garde movements. Thus, this theoretical lens was chosen to hone the reader\u2019s feel for how the works speak into the contemporary art discourse as an institutional field.<sup id=\"footnote-20\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"20\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"<a href=#_ftnref9 name=_ftn9><\/a>In addition to the obvious link to the first art group Linien in Denmark, the artists in Linien II draw on a wide range of artistic role models. For example, in the programmatic text on \u2018synthetic art\u2019 published in the pamphlet <em>liniens dokumenter <\/em>concurrently with the opening of the <em>Linien II<\/em> exhibition at Den Frie Udstillingsbygning in 1948, Richard Winther states that a number of \u2018major pioneers and theorists in visual art are: archipenko b. 1887, doesburg b. 1883, duchamp b. 1887, kandinsky 1866\u20131945, malevich 1878\u00ad\u20131935, moholy naghy 1872\u20131944, mondrian 1872\u20131944, schwitters b. 1887.\u2019 Richard Winther: \u2018syntetisk kunst\u2019 i Richard Winther (ed.): <em>liniens dokumenter<\/em>, no. 1, Copenhagen 1948, no page nos. Hereafter referred to as Winther 1948 (2).\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">20<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>In other words, the theoretical point of view gives rise to a series of questions of a methodological nature. How did the works connect with a public? How do the works relate to other works within the given artist\u2019s practice? How do the works and practices position themselves in relation to the surrounding art scene? It calls for a nuanced look at how these works depend on <em>more <\/em>than just what the eye sees \/ the ear can hear, specifically a look at the central affiliation with the art institution on which the avant-garde revolt against the very same art institution is conditioned. This applies no less \u2013 indeed perhaps to an even greater extent \u2013 when the subject under scrutiny is works in non-traditional media. The works\u2019 use of non-traditional media should not disqualify them as part of the art world, causing them to be seen solely as part of another social sub-system \u2013 that, with Danto in mind, might be designated the musicworld. On the contrary, I hope to demonstrate that the very use of non-traditional media is part of how the works challenge the art institution. In what follows, I will refer to this institutional affiliation as the works\u2019 <em>filiation<\/em>. The concept is borrowed from Roland Barthes, who understood by filiation the connection that a text must perform in order to be recognised as belonging to a genre. The concept of filiation seems useful in this context as it allows these works\u2019 central challenges to the conventions of the art institution to stand out clearly, including as regards their use of non-traditional media.<sup id=\"footnote-21\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"21\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"In a lecture on the novel, the French theorist Roland Barthes describes this relationship by saying that the work must perform a <em>filiation.<\/em> In order for a text to be understood as a novel, the text must also see itself as belonging to the novel tradition: \u2018The work must be <em>filial<\/em>: let\u2019s be clear that it must accept (and thereby, as I said, <em>transform)<\/em> a certain <em>filiation.<\/em> Roland Barthes: <em>The Preparation of the Novel Lecture Courses and Seminars at the Coll\u00e8ge de France (1978\u20131979 and 1979\u20131980)<\/em>, Cambridge 2010, p. 301.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">21<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<h2>Extended problem statement<\/h2>\n<p>The two lacquer discs in the SMK sound archive were recently digitised alongside the copies in the Museum Jorn collection, meaning that the works can now be heard in a quality sufficient to allow a number of central principles of construction to emerge.<sup id=\"footnote-22\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"22\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"For the release <em>Linien II. 1948\u201349,<\/em> Institut for Dansk Lydark\u00e6ologi 2021, both of the known sets of records from SMK\u2019s sound archive and Museums Jorn\u2019s collection were digitised by sound engineer Claus Byrith. Both sets are aluminium discs coated with lacquer. SMK\u2019s record from 1949 was in a critical state of conservation, as the paint had been attacked by mould \u2013 an often-seen problem with lacquer discs from this period if they have been poorly stored. However, it proved possible to clean and digitise the disc with good results. The records in the Museum Jorn\u2019s collection were found to be in a better state of preservation, with fewer scratches and less wear. Hence, the digitised versions of Museum Jorn\u2019s records were used as source material for the LP release.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">22<\/a><\/sup> This also reveals the formal devices through which the works translate the concrete artistic working methods into an artistic work with sound.<sup id=\"footnote-23\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"23\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"Especially the exhibitions <em>Liniens udstilling 1948, <\/em>31 July\u201315. August 1948 and <em>Linien 1949<\/em>, 27 August\u201311 September 1949. As can be seen from the titles of the exhibitions, the group, which posterity called Linien II, played very deliberately on its name and the blurred nature of the link to the earlier artist association Linien from 1935\u201339.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">23<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>In what follows, I will combine the outlined institutional perspective on the circumstances and positioning of the works with a close analysis of Winther\u2019s <em>Machine Symphony No. 2 <\/em>and Aagaard Andersen&#8217;s <em>Concerto for Five Violins and an Overhead Projector<\/em>. The purpose is to show how the construction of these works makes visible a close filiation with the artists\u2019 other practices as integrated and important parts of these. I also hope to illustrate that the sound works\u2019 break with conventions of visual art, which at first glance could appear not just to be a leap in media, but a leap into a different type of art, music, may equally well be seen as an expansion: a classical avant-garde transgression of the conventional framework of art with a view to renewing and expanding the scope of art\u2019s possibilities \u2013 not, emphatically, a complete break with artistic discourse and tradition. On the contrary, the leap in material is made on the basis of a keen awareness of art history and tradition, to which the artists deliberately and confidently seek to attach themselves. They extend a line in sound, as it were, resulting in works of a conceptual nature that challenge visual artistic conventions to such an extent that we should certainly not ignore them in an art historical context: rather, we should listen attentively.<\/p>\n<h2><em>Machine Symphony no. 2<\/em>: A description<\/h2>\n<p>I am listening to a digital audio file described as \u2018DEP710_13_31_12 inch record side 1.wav\u2019, a digital transfer of a 12-inch lacquer disc recorded in a sound studio in Frederiksberg in 1948. The disc contains a recording by artist Richard Winther, who, with help from Hans \u2018Bamse\u2019 Kragh-Jacobsen and Niels Macholm, recorded <em>Machine Symphony No. 2<\/em>. The digitisation was carried out in 2021 by sound engineer Claus Byrith. I am listening with headphones at my desk for the purpose of describing the audio for this article.<\/p>\n<p>The audio file opens with hissing scraping sounds, which I know are artefacts from the lacquer disc and from the equipment used for playback and digitising. It is noise generated by the medium and technology, not an intended part of the work; while it is quite dominant in the soundscape, this is not what your listening should focus on. After a few seconds, the piece begins with a piano being played, a small run of a few notes: g, g#, a, a# played with one hand and a deeper g an octave or two below, played with the other hand. After the rapid run across these notes, they are all struck together as a single dissonant chord and repeated \u2013 hammered \u2013 at a relentless pace for about half a minute. At 29 seconds, a man\u2019s voice is heard loudly saying \u2018Half a minute\u2019 in the studio. The reverberation of the voice conveys a sense of the space in which the recording takes place: it sounds like a relatively small room, and one that is not particularly well controlled acoustically. The time signature offered by the voice produces a marked shift: the relentless piano stops and is replaced by what sounds like a horn of some sort. My association is one of those cheap plastic trumpets you use at New Year\u2019s. The horn blower holds the crackling notes for a good 10 seconds. By the way the sound starts to tremble, I sense the effort involved in holding the tone for that long. When the horn stops, it is replaced by a distinct noise. While difficult to describe exactly, it seems familiar: like an old-fashioned TV set between channels, like white noise. I know from Richard Winther\u2019s diary notes that the sound is in fact that of Niels Macholm rubbing two pieces of sandpaper against each other. The noise is monotonous, forming a coherent mass, but in the small shifts of the sound I sense the movements of hands. The voice shouts out \u2018One minute\u2019, the sandpaper noise stops, and the piano starts again with the same little run of the same notes, which are then once again hammered into an extended sequence as before. After half a minute, the voice again cries out \u2018half a minute\u2019, but this time the piano continues unabated. As the seconds pass, I think I can hear how the muscles in Kragh-Jacobsen\u2019s arm tighten and how he struggles to keep the strokes even at this rapid, machine-like pace. Only when the voice once again shouts \u2018One minute\u2019 does the piano stop and the sandpaper take over. While the sandpaper is heard, a quieter voice can also be made out in the background. I recognise it from a later radio broadcast as that of Richard Winther. The sandpaper is then replaced by a new sound: an electric buzz, and Winther is once again heard in the background. In a low voice he says \u201830 seconds\u2019 and then repeats it as if addressed to the person calling out the time markers, who shortly after says \u201830 seconds\u2019 in an authoritative voice. The buzzer stops, the piano is back again.<\/p>\n<p>The rest, just under half, of the recording is made up of blocks of the same sound materials: the piano, the horn, the sandpaper, the buzzer, and the time markers. Towards the end, the blocks of sound also begin to overlap so that sandpaper and buzzers are heard at the same time. Then the piano and horn, piano and sandpaper, sandpaper and horn. The recording ends with the piano slowing down and making a final run across the four notes, letting them subside together with a short hum from the buzzer, a hiss from the sandpaper, and with a final honking from the horn, the recording from 1948 and the digitisation from 2021 come to an end.<\/p>\n<h2>Analysis of <em>Machine Symphony No. 2<\/em><\/h2>\n<p>The technical equipment is the most central condition governing the form of <em>Machine Symphony No. 2. <\/em>The technical recording equipment at the Wifos studio established the concrete formal framework for the work. Specifically, this meant that the sound recording had to take place within the physical space of the sound studio, and that the duration accommodated by a lacquer disc dictated the extent of the work: a 4-minute duration in the frequency range between approx. 50 Hz and approx. 10,000 Hz was what the studio\u2019s technical equipment could record.<sup id=\"footnote-24\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"24\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"Henrik Iversen: \u2018Tror ikke p\u00e5 stereo\u2019, in <em>Popul\u00e6r radio- og tv-teknik<\/em>, No. 3, 1970, p. 6.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">24<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>The recordings took place as onetakes cut into the glossy lacquer surface of the disc while the artists performed in the studio. The resulting record could then be copied by playing it on a regular record player and cutting the audio signal from that onto a new blank disc.<sup id=\"footnote-25\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"25\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"How many copies were made is not known. How the two records in the Museum Jorn collection entered the collection has not been established, but based on their Wifos labels it seems reasonable to assume that they are one of the sets of copies mentioned by Winther, made concurrently with the recordings.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">25<\/a><\/sup> This, together with Winther\u2019s account of the proceedings in a radio programme produced by composer Ole Buck for DR in 1971, draws a vivid picture of the recordings:<\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><a class=\"audio-player\" href=\"javascript:void(0);\" title=\"Afspil lyd: https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/12\/Klip-1_Richard-Winther-til-Persepctive-artikel.mp3\" hide-sidebar=\"true\" style=\"border:1px solid #000;color:#000;padding:1rem;border-radius:50px;display:inline-block;margin:1rem 0;text-decoration:none;\" class=\"audio-trigger\" data-audio=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/12\/Klip-1_Richard-Winther-til-Persepctive-artikel.mp3\">Audio Quote<span style=\"padding: .3rem .4rem .3rem .6rem;border:1px solid #000;border-radius:100%;margin-left:.5rem;\"><svg style=\"margin-bottom: -3px;margin-left: -2px;\" xmlns=\"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2000\/svg\" width=\"18\" height=\"18\" viewBox=\"0 0 24 24\" fill=\"#000\" stroke=\"currentColor\" stroke-width=\"2\" stroke-linecap=\"round\" stroke-linejoin=\"round\" class=\"feather feather-play\"><polygon points=\"5 3 19 12 5 21 5 3\"><\/polygon><\/svg><\/span><\/a> <sup id=\"footnote-26\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"26\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\" Buck 1971, 21 min 50 sec. to 23 min. 25 sec. Danish transcription: &#8220;S\u00e5 lavede vi \u2013 Bamse, ik\u2019, Kragh-Jacobsens, han var musikant inde i Tokanten, og han malede ogs\u00e5, og vi udstillede sammen i 47, ik\u2019, og s\u00e5 pr\u00f8vede jeg noget med .. \u00f8hm \u2013 alts\u00e5 jeg har ikke spor forstand p\u00e5 musik, og det havde jeg heller ikke dengang, men jeg havde mulighed for klaver, og det mishandlede jeg p\u00e5 det groveste og s\u00e5 noget .. at det lignede maskiner, ik\u2019 (griner), og s\u00e5 forklarede jeg det, og s\u00e5 snakkede jeg med Bamse og s\u00e5dan, ik\u2019. Vi var nogle stykker: Bamse og Macholm og Gertsen og det var en hel bande, ik\u2019, og s\u00e5 sagde jeg: \u2018Nu skal vi have indspillet noget af det\u2019, ik\u2019. Og dengang havde man ikke b\u00e5ndoptager, vi m\u00e5tte ud p\u00e5 Frederiksberg, en eller anden sidevej, \u00f8h, jeg kan ikke huske, Nyvej eller s\u00e5dan noget. Der var en, der havde et musikstudie, og der kunne man alts\u00e5 f\u00e5 det indspillet. Og s\u00e5 spillede.. jeg spillede noget af det, jeg havde \u00f8vet mig p\u00e5, og s\u00e5 spillede Bamse et stykke, og s\u00e5 lavede vi et stykke sammen, fordi jeg havde v\u00e6ret inde hos Duzaine Hansen og k\u00f8be en korsetfjeder og s\u00e5 havde jeg min cykel med ind, og s\u00e5 stak og spiller vi det der, stak det ind i hjulet ik? Og vi havde sandpapir og et eller andet t\u00e5gehorn og havde v\u00e6ret inde og k\u00f8be for ti kroner fyrv\u00e6rkeri, og s\u00e5 lavede vi s\u00e5 nogle indspilninger.&#8221;\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">26<\/a><\/sup><\/span><\/p>\n<blockquote><p>Then we made \u2013 Bamse, you know, Kragh-Jacobsens, he was a musician at Tokanten, and he painted too, and we exhibited together in 1947, right and then I tried something with \u2026 erm \u2013 I mean, I know nothing of music, and I didn\u2019t at that time either, but I had the opportunity to play the piano, and I bashed it around in the worst way possible and saw something &#8230; that it looked like machines, right (laughs), and then I explained it, and then I talked to Bamse, right? There were a couple of us there: Bamse and Macholm and Gertsen; this whole gang, right, and then I said: \u201cWe need to record some of it\u201d, right? And back then you didn\u2019t have tape recorders, we had to go out to Frederiksberg, to some side road, uh, I can\u2019t remember, Nyvej or something like that. Someone had a music studio there, so you could have it recorded there. And then we played &#8230; I played some of what I\u2019d been practicing, and then Bamse played a piece, and then we made a piece together, because I had been to Duzaine Hansen\u2019s to buy a corset spring and I\u2019d brought my bike inside, and then we played that thing, stuck it in the wheel, right? And we had sandpaper and some kind of foghorn and had bought ten kroner\u2019s worth of fireworks, and then we did some recordings.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Richard Winther\u2019s tone in the interview strikes a light-hearted and playful note, hinting at the nature of the atmosphere surrounding the production of the works. An atmosphere that can also be felt in the works. From Winther\u2019s diary entries and the notes attached to the records in the SMK sound archives, we know a number of details about the recordings and the sources of sound used.<sup id=\"footnote-27\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"27\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"Winther, diary notes, no page nos., and Richard Winther\u2019s notes handed in alongside the deposit of the two lacquer discs in the SMK Sound Archive, SMK DEP710_13.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">27<\/a><\/sup> It seems that the two recordings, which took place a year apart, are condensed into a single story in Winther\u2019s retelling in the radio interview. Combining his account with the works and his diary notes, it appears that the bicycle bell, the corset spring and the fireworks were part of the recording of Winther\u2019s work <em>Bruitistic Improvisation <\/em>in 1949.<sup id=\"footnote-28\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"28\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"See Kaslov 2021 for a detailed description of Richard Winther\u2019s work <em>Bruitist Improvisation<\/em>, 1949.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">28<\/a><\/sup> In 1948, the instrumentation on Kragh-Jacobsen\u2019s <em>Bruitistic Concerto No. 1 <\/em>consisted of the piano, played by Krag-Jacobsen himself, a test record otherwise reserved for the sound engineer\u2019s calibration of equipment, and an electric buzzer played or activated by Winther. On Winther\u2019s <em>Machine Symphony no. 2 <\/em>Krag-Jacobsen plays the piano, Macholm plays sandpaper and Winther play the electric buzzer and horn.<sup id=\"footnote-29\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"29\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"Winther, diary notes, no page nos. For a detailed description of the circumstances of the recordings and Winther\u2019s notes, see Kaslov 2021.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">29<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<figure><div style=\"width: 1280px;\" class=\"wp-video\"><video class=\"wp-video-shortcode\" id=\"video-5760-1\" width=\"1280\" height=\"720\" preload=\"metadata\" controls=\"controls\"><source type=\"video\/mp4\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/fig1_Magnus-Kaslov_Linien-II-fri-af-laerredet.mp4?_=1\" \/><a href=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/fig1_Magnus-Kaslov_Linien-II-fri-af-laerredet.mp4\">https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/fig1_Magnus-Kaslov_Linien-II-fri-af-laerredet.mp4<\/a><\/video><\/div><figcaption><strong>Fig. 2.<\/strong> Visualisation, in the form of a spectral analysis, showing the frequency range along the y-axis and time along the x-axis. The loudness of the different frequency ranges is shown as gradations of a colour spectrum ranging from black, indicating silence, through red and to yellow, indicating loudness.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>To support my analysis, I have visualised the sound in a spectral analysis that shows the frequency range from low to high and duration from left to right [<strong>Fig. 2<\/strong>].<\/p>\n<p>In the visualisation, the work\u2019s block-like structure is clearly evident and, in contrast to the listening experience, it establishes an overview of the work in its entirety. The listening experience and visualisation highlight different aspects of the work. Of course, there is something inherently counter-intuitive about visualising a sound work that is specifically intended as a listening experience extended in time. However, there is a central point in the fact that the visualisation, which in itself is only made possible by the digitisation of the recording, renders visible structures and proportions that show the link between the sound work and the other pieces Winther was working on at the time. Several of these, comprising paintings and sculptures alike, were shown at the same exhibition where <em>Machine Symphony No. 2 <\/em>was featured.<\/p>\n<p>The voice marking time and the overall picture of the work\u2019s block-like structure both point to the tightly controlled construction of the piece. The structure is generated on the basis of the dimensions of the medium, specifically the four-minute-long window of opportunity offered by the lacquer disc. Thus, the medium in itself is the decisive formal aspect governing the construction. The four minutes are subdivided into blocks of one minute each, which in turn are subdivided into halves, quarters and eighths and filled in by the various sound materials. In the interview with Ole Buck, Richard Winther refers to the works on the two lacquer discs as \u2018noise paintings\u2019.<sup id=\"footnote-30\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"30\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"Buck 1971, 23 min 38 sec.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">30<\/a><\/sup> <em>Machine Symphony No. 2\u2019<\/em>s construction and monotonous \u2013 one is tempted to say monochrome \u2013 block-like feel invites comparison to Winther\u2019s paintings and sculptures from the same period, which also make use of monochrome fields of colour arranged in rhythmic and contrasting sequences based on and conditioned by the physicality of the work\u2019s dimensions \u2013 their height, width, depth \u2013 such as Winther\u2019s <em>Constructive Concretion <\/em>(Danish: <em>Konstruktiv konkretion<\/em>), 1948, where subdivisions of the dimensions of the canvas are used as a starting point for generating the series of lines and colour fields [F<strong>ig. 3<\/strong>].<\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_5682\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-5682\" style=\"width: 2037px\" class=\"wp-caption alignnone\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-5682 size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/03\/fig2_Magnus-Kaslov_Linien-II-fri-af-laerredet-5.jpg\" alt=\"fig.2: Richard Winther: Konstruktiv konkretion, 1948. Privateje. Foto: Ole Akh\u00f8j.\" width=\"2037\" height=\"2048\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/03\/fig2_Magnus-Kaslov_Linien-II-fri-af-laerredet-5.jpg 2037w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/03\/fig2_Magnus-Kaslov_Linien-II-fri-af-laerredet-5-378x380.jpg 378w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/03\/fig2_Magnus-Kaslov_Linien-II-fri-af-laerredet-5-1074x1080.jpg 1074w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/03\/fig2_Magnus-Kaslov_Linien-II-fri-af-laerredet-5-150x150.jpg 150w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/03\/fig2_Magnus-Kaslov_Linien-II-fri-af-laerredet-5-768x772.jpg 768w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/03\/fig2_Magnus-Kaslov_Linien-II-fri-af-laerredet-5-1528x1536.jpg 1528w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 2037px) 100vw, 2037px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-5682\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Fig. 3.<\/strong> Richard Winther, <em>Constructive Concretion<\/em>, 1948. Private collection. Photo: Ole Akh\u00f8j.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<h3><strong>A-hierarchically ordered plastic sound<\/strong><\/h3>\n<p>In the article \u2018The Crisis of Easel Painting\u2019, also from 1948, Clement Greenberg turns to a concept from music, polyphony, to describe the equivalence of pictorial elements which he finds in the non-illusionist geometric \u2018all-over\u2019 painting: \u2018Just as Sch\u00f6nberg makes every element, every sound in the composition of equal <em>importance <\/em>\u2013 different but <em>equivalent <\/em>\u2013 so the \u201call-over\u201d painter renders every element and every area of the picture equivalent in accent and emphasis.\u2019<sup id=\"footnote-31\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"31\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"Clement Greenberg: <em>Art and Culture<\/em>, London 1973, p. 156\u2013157.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">31<\/a><\/sup> I believe that the equivalence, the equal importance of elements that Greenberg sees in Sch\u00f6nberg and the all-over painters\u2019 equalising of different pictorial elements, also very precisely describes the use of sound materials in <em>Machine Symphony No. 2<\/em>. All of the elements generating sound \u2013 with the exception of the voice marking time \u2013 are used in a way where the sounds produced can be lengthened or shortened without causing the sound material to change its timbre or sonorous character. The sounds are made and used as a plastic material, with a monotonous\/monochrome block-like feel where the sounds are adapted to the work\u2019s time-based principle of construction. Even the piano is used, hammered, abused in the crudest way, in such a repetitive and monotonous manner that its sound becomes a single, coherent mass that can be lengthened or shortened according to the needs of the composition. The voice\u2019s time markings dictate and reveal, in an almost didactic fashion, the sound work\u2019s time-based construction, which delimits and defines the blocks of sound \u2013 almost like the pencil lines of an underdrawing that can still be glimpsed through the layers of paint on a painting.<\/p>\n<h3><strong>A synthetic art, a new kind of painting, a space-time modulator<\/strong><\/h3>\n<p>Experiments in form translated or reworked in artistic media other than those of traditional visual arts appear in several places in Richard Winther\u2019s practice at about the same time, and the same holds true of Gunnar Aagaard Andersen and a number of the other artists from Linien II. As I highlighted in the introduction, referring to the words of Mikkel Bogh, the playful, almost silly sloshing around of concrete ideas between different media was rather the name of the game at this point. Winther specifically mentions in the book <em>Den hellige Hieronymus\u2019 Damekreds<\/em>, published under the pseudonym Ricardo Da Winti in 1978, that it was a series of literary experiments, some of which are reprinted in the self-published collection of poems <em>Den n\u00f8genfr\u00f8ede <\/em>(The Gymnosperm) under the pseudonym Gro Vive from 1949 [<strong>Fig. 4<\/strong>], that led him to record the lacquer discs:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>There is not far to go from words to sounds. In Gro Vive there are poems written by using the typewriter keys like the keys of a piano: I listened to the rhythm of the machine. I composed with sounds as if they were rectangular picture elements whose height and width were determined by tone and time, rhythm and noise, form and formlessness. (Morph, amorphous). A Bruitist concert and a machine symphony of this nature were recorded in 1948 on lacquer discs that still exist.<sup id=\"footnote-32\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"32\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"Ricardo da Niv\u00e5 [Richard Winther]: <em>Den hellige Hieronymus\u2019 damekreds. <\/em><em>Et litter\u00e6rt tableau,<\/em> Copenhagen 1978, p. 464.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">32<\/a><\/sup><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<figure id=\"attachment_5684\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-5684\" style=\"width: 1607px\" class=\"wp-caption alignnone\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-5684 size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/03\/fig3_Magnus-Kaslov_Linien-II-fri-af-laerredet-8.jpg\" alt=\"fig.3: Richard Winther: maskin-boogie, 1949 trykt i Gro Vive [Richard Winther]: Den n\u00f8genfr\u00f8ede, K\u00f8benhavn 1949, s. 14.\" width=\"1607\" height=\"1608\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/03\/fig3_Magnus-Kaslov_Linien-II-fri-af-laerredet-8.jpg 1607w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/03\/fig3_Magnus-Kaslov_Linien-II-fri-af-laerredet-8-380x380.jpg 380w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/03\/fig3_Magnus-Kaslov_Linien-II-fri-af-laerredet-8-1079x1080.jpg 1079w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/03\/fig3_Magnus-Kaslov_Linien-II-fri-af-laerredet-8-150x150.jpg 150w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/03\/fig3_Magnus-Kaslov_Linien-II-fri-af-laerredet-8-768x768.jpg 768w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/03\/fig3_Magnus-Kaslov_Linien-II-fri-af-laerredet-8-1536x1536.jpg 1536w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 1607px) 100vw, 1607px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-5684\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Fig. 4.<\/strong> Richard Winther, <em>machine-boogie<\/em>, 1949 printed in Gro Vive [Richard Winther]: <em>Den n\u00f8genfr\u00f8ede<\/em>, Copenhagen 1949, p. 14.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>Such experiments across media where poems are generated by the musical use of a typewriter, which then leads on to sound works recorded on lacquer discs, appear to be the central formal device employed in the works: the use or appropriation of the media, materials, and technologies of one art form subjected to the logic or approach of another art form gives rise to the works. This constitutes a fundamental artistic experimentation of a conceptual nature, one that strives to expand the scope of visual art and its endeavours by the inclusion of new materials and media as well as by the appropriation of material and media of other art forms. An appropriation that relates in a conceptually playful manner to the conventional forms and formats of the appropriated.<\/p>\n<p>How the expansion of the visual art field that Winther undertook in the years around 1948\u201349 looked to him is most clearly expressed in the pamphlet <em>liniens dokumenter <\/em>(the linien documents) \u00a0which was intended as the first issue of a journal that would function as a discursive forum for the art and ideas developed by Linien II.<sup id=\"footnote-33\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"33\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"Winter 1948 (2). Ib Geertsen states that it was Winther who had launched the \u2018\u201dhard\u201d line\u2019 and that Winther was also the one who had taken the initiative and paid for the publication of <em>liniens documenter: <\/em>\u2018I saw it for the first time at the official opening.\u2019 Ib Geertsen: \u2018Linien II\u2019 in Troels Andersen (ed.): <em>Billedkunst<\/em>, no. 2, 1967, p. 30.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">33<\/a><\/sup> In a programmatic text on \u2018synthetic art\u2019, Winther articulates a number of fundamental views on the role of Constructivist art as \u2018a reconstruction, a construction, everywhere in vibrant global art we see a mentality approaching that of constructivism.\u2019<sup id=\"footnote-34\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"34\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"Richard Winther: \u2018syntetisk kunst\u2019 in Winther 1948 (2), no page nos.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">34<\/a><\/sup> According to Winther\u2019s thinking, Constructive art represented the way ahead for the development of art and for a moral-ethical reconstruction that was to create a solid, universal foundation, not just for art, but for the whole of society to build on after the war.<sup id=\"footnote-35\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"35\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"I believe there is good reason to question the lofty moral-ethical perspectives invoked by the artists of Linien II, in this case specifically Richard Winther. For example, the notion of the rational, freely experimenting artist is often conditioned by notions of its opposites in the form of the racialised (non-white) person and the gendered woman (non-man). This is clearly evident in the period\u2019s thinking on art, including among those close to Linien II, for example in the book <em>Symboler i abstrakt kunst <\/em>from 1933 by Vilhelm Bjerke Petersen, who was part of the Linien group. Here, Bjerke Petersen constructs the scientifically enlightened, rational European masculine artist-subject by explicitly contrasting that position up against the backward, primitive black African. Even so, however relevant such a critique might be in providing a wider perspective for the so-called free abstract-concrete art, it falls outside the scope and focus of this article.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">35<\/a><\/sup> Regarding the use of new materials and the emergence of the new \u2018synthetic art\u2019, Winther continues:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>it is not certain, moreover, that the present form of painting: canvas and pigments is the right one. [..] a new painting floats before my eyes, a multidimensional, physical-dynamic one, which can vary the means of psychic effects infinitely and simultaneously, a painting that expresses itself by direct light, both its own and light from the surroundings by means of reflective and transparent elements. [&#8230;] this painting will not resemble anything that came before, it will be both film, sculpture, kinematics etc., it would therefore be incorrect to speak of \u2018painting\u2019; calling it a \u2018space-time modulator\u2019 would be better.<sup id=\"footnote-36\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"36\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"Winther 1948 (2), no page nos.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">36<\/a><\/sup><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>The way in which Winther writes his way towards this new art, what he calls a space-time modulator, is crucial: modern techniques and materials must be incorporated in the creation of the new synthetic art. Notably, this expansion takes place via the visual arts, specifically via painting.<\/p>\n<p>I propose that <em>Machine Symphony No. 2, <\/em>a work that directly experiments with media, could be regarded as an attempt to expand the realm of art and create \u2018this painting\u2019 that will not resemble anything that has come before and should therefore, according to Wither in 1948, be referred to as a \u2018space-time modulator\u2019 instead. Notably, in 1970 Winther specifically refers to the sound works from 1948\u201349 as \u2018noise <em>paintings<\/em>\u2019.<sup id=\"footnote-37\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"37\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"Buck 1971, 23 min 38 sec.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">37<\/a><\/sup> In its title and in other ways, the work plays with the appropriation of terms, technologies, and (in part) instruments from the field of music, but it does so very deliberately in a self-conscious conceptual manner that gives the appropriation a tint of mischievous challenge, making it appear almost joking. To only regard\/hear the work as music would be to risk overlooking its general challenge to the concept of art and the central conceptual nature of appropriation. One would, as it were, fail to get the joke, taking it at face value. I will return to the artists\u2019 inclusion of new and non-traditional materials as well as the formats and technologies of other art forms in my concluding discussion of Winther and Aagaard Andersen\u2019s works, but for now Ib Geertsen can have the final word. In an interview from the period, he states that: \u2018There is something inherently wrong in specialising &#8230; to paint nothing but oil paintings is quite frankly old-fashioned. Modern technology makes so many aids available that the possibilities for expressing oneself are almost unlimited \u2013 just think of television, radio, film, the gramophone, and so on.\u2019<sup id=\"footnote-38\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"38\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"Quoted in Bogh 1996, p. 29.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">38<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<h2>Concerning <em>Concerto for Five Violins and <\/em><em>an Overhead<\/em><em> Projector<\/em><\/h2>\n<p>Gunnar Aagaard Andersen\u2019s <em>Concerto for Five Violins and an Overhead Projector <\/em>from 1949 does not make use of recording technology. Rather, it uses a self-invented graphic form of notation to create a score to be performed in a concert situation. As is established by the title, with its metonymic humour and reference to the traditions of score music, the work is intended to be performed by five violins while the graphic score is projected onto a wall by an overhead projector so that image and sound are experienced together.<\/p>\n<p>The SMK sound archive contains colour photocopies of parts of the graphic score, sheet music and an interview with Grete Aagaard Andersen conducted by William Louis S\u00f8rensen in connection with collecting the archive.<sup id=\"footnote-39\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"39\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"The original score and a number of sketches are in the private archive of the Aagaard Andersen family, who have kindly allowed the originals to be scanned and used here.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">39<\/a><\/sup> No recordings of <em>Concerto for Five Violins and an Overhead Projector <\/em>from the performances that took place in 1949 exist, but there is a recording from 1971, when Gruppen for Alternativ Musik (The Alternative Music Group) performed the work while using alternative instrumentation. That is the recording used here as an illustration <strong>[Fig. 5]<\/strong>.<sup id=\"footnote-40\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"40\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"<a href=#_ftnref2 name=_ftn2><\/a>This recording is also the one released on the LP <em>Linien II 1948\u201349<\/em>, Institut for Dansk Lydark\u00e6ologi, 2021. The recording has been kindly made available by Ole Buck, who conducted the performance in 1971. For more details about instrumentation and performance history see Kaslov 2021.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">40<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<figure><div style=\"width: 1280px;\" class=\"wp-video\"><video class=\"wp-video-shortcode\" id=\"video-5760-2\" width=\"1280\" height=\"720\" preload=\"metadata\" controls=\"controls\"><source type=\"video\/mp4\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/03\/fig4_Magnus-Kaslov_Linien-II-fri-af-laerredet.mp4?_=2\" \/><a href=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/03\/fig4_Magnus-Kaslov_Linien-II-fri-af-laerredet.mp4\">https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/03\/fig4_Magnus-Kaslov_Linien-II-fri-af-laerredet.mp4<\/a><\/video><\/div><figcaption><strong>Fig. 5.<\/strong> The video seeks to illustrate the work by comparing images 17, 18 and 19 from the graphic score with corresponding excerpts from a later performance of the work with alternative instrumentation (oboe, violin, cello, organ, and horn) performed by Gruppen for Alternativ Musik in 1971. It is perhaps worth noting that quite a few mistakes in the performance become apparent in this close comparison of score and recording. The recording has been kindly made available by composer Ole Buck, who arranged the performance.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<h2>Description of <em>Concerto for Five Violins and <\/em><em>an Overhead Projector<\/em><\/h2>\n<p>As one of the items on the programme at the evening event held by Linien II at Charlottenborg and repeated on 5 and 6 September 1949 in the lecture hall at the offices of the Danish newspaper <em>Politiken<\/em>, audiences were treated to Gunnar Aagaard Andersen\u2019s <em>Concerto for Five Violins and an Overhead Projector<\/em>. The audience could not see the five violinists performing the work: they were placed behind a screen, out of sight. Instead, an overhead projector provided a visual focus in the form of a graphic score, drawn on squared graph paper, which was projected onto a wall.<a href=\"#_ftnref1\" name=\"_ftn1\"><\/a><sup id=\"footnote-41\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"41\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"According to Aagaard Andersen, the dramatic choice to keep the source of the sound, meaning the five violinists, hidden was solely determined by the fact that the five musicians were still students at the conservatory and therefore not officially allowed to perform in public. The fact that their being hidden away was done to circumvent this is fascinating and seems to resonate with the distinct formal logic of the work, even though that was allegedly a coincidence.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">41<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>When listening to the recording of <em>Concerto for Five Violins and an Overhead Projector<\/em> performed by Gruppen for Alternativ Musik in 1971, I imagine that the experience on those evenings in 1949 must have had the same rather stiff, slightly fumbling and somewhat didactic feel. However, it appears that Danish artist Jens J\u00f8rgen Thorsen, who was a student at the academy\u2019s school of architecture at the time, had a more enraptured experience, which he describes as follows: \u2018Fantastical fountains of sound gushed forth, and the sources of that fountain were shown on the wall by a slide show, like a giant painting.\u2019<sup id=\"footnote-42\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"42\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"Thorsen 1965, p. 130.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">42<\/a><\/sup> In 1971, Gunnar Aagaard Andersen describes how \u2018once a series of slides had been shown, people gradually grew able to read them. Then, you felt in the room that they knew what they were about to hear and felt a certain excitement about what was to come once translated into sound.\u2019<sup id=\"footnote-43\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"43\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"Buck 1971, 3 min. 15 sec.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">43<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_5686\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-5686\" style=\"width: 480px\" class=\"wp-caption alignleft\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-5686\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/03\/fig5_Magnus-Kaslov_Linien-II-fri-af-laerredet-1-1444x1080.jpg\" alt=\"fig.5 Gunnar Aagaard Andersen, uden titel, 1947.\" width=\"480\" height=\"359\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/03\/fig5_Magnus-Kaslov_Linien-II-fri-af-laerredet-1-1444x1080.jpg 1444w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/03\/fig5_Magnus-Kaslov_Linien-II-fri-af-laerredet-1-380x284.jpg 380w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/03\/fig5_Magnus-Kaslov_Linien-II-fri-af-laerredet-1-768x575.jpg 768w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/03\/fig5_Magnus-Kaslov_Linien-II-fri-af-laerredet-1-1536x1149.jpg 1536w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/03\/fig5_Magnus-Kaslov_Linien-II-fri-af-laerredet-1.jpg 2048w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 480px) 100vw, 480px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-5686\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Fig. 6.<\/strong> Gunnar Aagaard Andersen, untitled, 1947. Private collection.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<figure id=\"attachment_5688\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-5688\" style=\"width: 480px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-5688\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/03\/fig6_Magnus-Kaslov_Linien-II-fri-af-laerredet-1-1423x1080.jpg\" alt=\"fig.6 Gunnar Aagaard Andersen, Deling i sidernes forhold, 1949.\" width=\"480\" height=\"364\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/03\/fig6_Magnus-Kaslov_Linien-II-fri-af-laerredet-1-1423x1080.jpg 1423w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/03\/fig6_Magnus-Kaslov_Linien-II-fri-af-laerredet-1-380x288.jpg 380w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/03\/fig6_Magnus-Kaslov_Linien-II-fri-af-laerredet-1-768x583.jpg 768w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/03\/fig6_Magnus-Kaslov_Linien-II-fri-af-laerredet-1-1536x1166.jpg 1536w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/03\/fig6_Magnus-Kaslov_Linien-II-fri-af-laerredet-1.jpg 2048w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 480px) 100vw, 480px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-5688\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Fig. 7.<\/strong> Gunnar Aagaard Andersen, <em>No. VI<\/em>, 1949. Trapholt.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<h2>Analysis of <em>Concerto for Five Violins and <\/em><em>an Overhead Projector<\/em><\/h2>\n<p>The graphic score for <em>Concerto for Five Violins and an Overhead Projector<\/em> consists of a series of numbered images, many of which can be recognised from the series of around 50 \u2018forestillingsl\u00f8se\u2019 \u2013 literally \u2018image-less\u2019 \u2013 paintings that Aagaard Andersen painted between 1947 and 1949[<strong>Fig. 6<\/strong>] [<strong>Fig. 7<\/strong>].<sup id=\"footnote-44\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"44\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"Aagaard Andersen himself uses the word \u2019forestillingsl\u00f8se\u2019 about the series of paintings. Gunnar Aagaard Andersen: \u2018Den gyldne, den harmoniske og Rubens&#8221; in <em>CRAS \u2013 Tidsskrift for Kunst og Kultur, <\/em>Vol. VIII, 1975, p. 25.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">44<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>The entire series is constructed according to a special principle of construction that Aagaard Andersen believed to have discovered in Rubens, and which he called <em>A division of the relationship of the sides<\/em>.<sup id=\"footnote-45\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"45\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"See Kaslov 2021 for a more detailed description of the principle of <em>Deling i sidernes forhold (Division of the relationship of the sides)<\/em>, the series of paintings as well as details of the graphic score housed in Gunnar Aagaard Andersen\u2019s archive. The work sections are referred to as \u2018billeder\u2019 (pictures) on the cover of the musical score, a copy of which exists in the SMK Sound Archive, SMK DEP710_12-3.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">45<\/a><\/sup> In the graphic score, the geometric imagery of the paintings is pixelated and adapted to the scores grid \u2013 literally a kind of digitisation \u2013 to match the resolution that the score uses: a grid made up of graph paper squares of 5&#215;5 millimetres each. All the \u2018pictures\u2019 are 28 squares in length and 21 squares in height. The crucial conceptual parameters that make the pixelated drawing readable as a musical score are the facts that the 28 squares going lengthwise are intended to represent time, to be read from left to right as 28 beats, while the 21 grids from bottom to top represent 21 ascending semitones reaching from the lowermost square to the uppermost. Thus, the grid lets each \u2018picture\u2019 express a potential range of sounds spanned by a register of 21 semitones and a duration of 28 beats, made up of only whole notes. The images can thus be played with the mechanical logic of a musical score from left to right \u2013 just as one imagine they would have been if the paintings had indeed been fed through a barrel organ in accordance with Richard Winther\u2019s original idea. The graphic score indicates neither tempo nor a specific tonal anchoring, but from the printed sheet music and the recording from 1971 it can be ascertained that the performance uses the notes from c to g# and a tempo of 60, which corresponds to each square, each whole-tone step, lasting one second.<\/p>\n<p>The choices made to carry out the translation from painterly image to sound constitute the conceptual engine that generates the specific form of the sound work and its sonic characteristics. A logic which, when first put into action, appears mechanical, yet is nevertheless based on a series of aesthetic choices \u2013 choice of instrumentation, tonal material, duration, and conditions governing the performance \u2013 that can reasonably be described as alien or arbitrary in relation to the actual principle of construction, as much so as the various painting techniques and pigments Aagaard Andersen used in the series of paintings.<\/p>\n<p>Whereas Winther, in <em>Machine Symphony No. 2<\/em>, takes the working method used to construct his painterly images based on the physical dimensions of the medium and applies this to the creation of a work on the lacquer disc medium, Aagaard Andersen can be said to take a detour around the imagery of his paintings to arrive at <em>Concerto for Five Violins and an Overhead Projector<\/em>. A detour that is not so much about a transfer of a method as it is a translation of a two-dimensional image logic into sound extending in time, based on a set of parameters that appear more or less arbitrary.<\/p>\n<p>Speaking about the link between <em>Concerto for Five Violins and an Overhead Projector<\/em> and the series of paintings based on the principle of <em>A division of the relationship of the sides<\/em>, Aagaard Andersen says:<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_edn1\" name=\"_ednref1\"><a class=\"audio-player\" href=\"javascript:void(0);\" title=\"Afspil lyd: https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/12\/Klip-2_Gunnar-Aagaard-Andersen-til-Persepctive-artikel.mp3\" hide-sidebar=\"true\" style=\"border:1px solid #000;color:#000;padding:1rem;border-radius:50px;display:inline-block;margin:1rem 0;text-decoration:none;\" class=\"audio-trigger\" data-audio=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/12\/Klip-2_Gunnar-Aagaard-Andersen-til-Persepctive-artikel.mp3\">Audio Quote<span style=\"padding: .3rem .4rem .3rem .6rem;border:1px solid #000;border-radius:100%;margin-left:.5rem;\"><svg style=\"margin-bottom: -3px;margin-left: -2px;\" xmlns=\"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2000\/svg\" width=\"18\" height=\"18\" viewBox=\"0 0 24 24\" fill=\"#000\" stroke=\"currentColor\" stroke-width=\"2\" stroke-linecap=\"round\" stroke-linejoin=\"round\" class=\"feather feather-play\"><polygon points=\"5 3 19 12 5 21 5 3\"><\/polygon><\/svg><\/span><\/a><\/a><sup id=\"footnote-46\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"46\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"Buck 1971, 0 min. 57 sec. to 2 min. 11 sec. Danish transcription: &#8220;Ja, vi kom naturligt uden for maleriet, for der var ting, som maleriet ikke kunne g\u00f8re, n\u00e5r vi pr\u00f8vede p\u00e5 det. Jeg selv kom i gang med musikken p\u00e5 f\u00f8lgende m\u00e5de: Jeg stod med nogle billeder, som v\u00e6sentligt skulle udtrykke sig ved hj\u00e6lp af linjer. For at kunne tegne disse linjer m\u00e5tte jeg give linjen en tykkelse. Denne tykkelse kom ikke linjen ved som udtryk. S\u00e5 pr\u00f8vede jeg p\u00e5 i stedet at male to farver op til linjen, s\u00e5 linjen blev et skel, en kontur mellem de to farver \u2013 men lige s\u00e5 snart jeg havde to farver p\u00e5 billeder, s\u00e5 skete der det, af den ene farve gik frem i \u00f8jet og den anden trak sig tilbage som en baggrund, og det var heller ikke hensigten. S\u00e5 pr\u00f8vede jeg p\u00e5 at lav\u00e9re farven v\u00e6k fra skellet, s\u00e5 den meget hurtigt h\u00f8rte op, og jeg stod tilbage med det hvide l\u00e6rred \u2013 men det gav endnu st\u00f8rre rumillusion. Og s\u00e5 en dag, s\u00e5 siger jeg: \u201cMan skulle da for fanden kunne lave en linje, der var fri af l\u00e6rredet, men stod direkte i luften \u2013 det m\u00e5 man kunne g\u00f8re som lyde.&#8221;\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">46<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<blockquote><p>Yes, we quite naturally strayed outside of painting, because there were things that painting could not do when we tried it. I myself got started with music like this: I had these pictures which essentially had to express themselves by means of lines. In order to draw those lines, I had to give the line a thickness. This thickness did not pertain to the line as a mode of expression. Then I tried instead to paint two colours up against the line so that the line became a dividing line, a contour between the two colours \u2013 but as soon as I had two colours in the pictures, what happened was that one colour seemed to come toward you while the other receded and became a background, and that was not the intention either. Then I tried to apply the colour as a wash moving away from the dividing line, quickly coming to an end and leaving me with the white canvas \u2013 but this just created an even greater illusion of space. And then one day, I said: \u201cThere bloody well has to be a way of making a line that\u2019s free of the canvas, standing straight into the air \u2013 you must be able to do that through sounds.\u201d<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>The purpose of the paintings in the series was, then, to visualise the principle of construction <em>in itself <\/em>without the use of representation and illusionistic depiction. However, it proved impossible to escape what he calls spatial illusion. As observer, one forms the impressions that the painterly-material experiments with different painting techniques are in themselves arbitrary in relation to the principle of construction the artist seeks to embody. And that they \u2013 the oils on the canvas \u2013 are forever getting in the way, weighing down the principle of construction with their materiality so that it tumbles to the ground time and time again. According to Aagaard Andersen, this leads to such great dissatisfaction with painting\u2019s ability to embody the principle of construction that he has to step outside the realm of painting and into sound, striving there to set the principle free from paint and canvas. He seeks to allow the principle of construction to shed its material garb to stand disrobed, straight into the air\u00a0<strong>[Fig. 8]<\/strong>.<\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_5704\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-5704\" style=\"width: 1920px\" class=\"wp-caption alignnone\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-5704 size-large\" src=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/03\/fig7_Magnus-Kaslov_Linien-II-fri-af-laerredet-1920x732.jpg\" alt=\"fig.7: Visualisering i form af spektralanalyse. Det er bem\u00e6rkelsesv\u00e6rdigt, at visualiseringen \u2013 ulig lytteoplevelsen \u2013 n\u00e6rmest giver fornemmelsen af, at tonerne bliver h\u00e6ngende i luften, s\u00e5 det grafiske partiturs motiver tydeligt kan genkendes. De pixelerede geometriske former er dog aftegnet mangedobbelt som konsekvens af instrumenternes overtoner. \" width=\"1920\" height=\"732\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/03\/fig7_Magnus-Kaslov_Linien-II-fri-af-laerredet-1920x732.jpg 1920w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/03\/fig7_Magnus-Kaslov_Linien-II-fri-af-laerredet-380x145.jpg 380w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/03\/fig7_Magnus-Kaslov_Linien-II-fri-af-laerredet-768x293.jpg 768w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/03\/fig7_Magnus-Kaslov_Linien-II-fri-af-laerredet-1536x586.jpg 1536w, https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/03\/fig7_Magnus-Kaslov_Linien-II-fri-af-laerredet.jpg 2048w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 1920px) 100vw, 1920px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-5704\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Fig. 8. <\/strong>Visualisation in the form of spectral analysis. It is remarkable that the visualisation \u2013 unlike the listening experience \u2013 can almost be said to convey a sense that the notes are hanging in the air, allowing the motifs of the graphic score to be clearly recognised. However, the pixelated geometric shapes appear superimposed multiple times due to the instruments\u2019 overtones.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<h3><strong>Can the line stand in the air, free of the canvas<\/strong><strong>?<\/strong><\/h3>\n<p>In the actual experience of the work, the graphic score would have supported the listening experience with its didactic clarity, allowing the audience to make the connection between image and sound and also make or follow the translation in their mind along the way. In the interview with Grete Aagaard Andersen kept in the SMK sound archive, she contributes her own perspective on how the <em>Concerto for Five Violins and an Overhead Projector <\/em>can be understood in the context of the study of the construction principle found in <em>A division of the relationship of the sides<\/em>. Specifically, she comments on whether it was possible to visualise the principle of construction in sound:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>It is a test of whether it can be done at all, and in fact it can\u2019t, because time comes into play. You can never make something that goes backwards, and whereas visually, you perceive something as a whole, it [the image found in the individual sound pictures] is divided into time intervals. [&#8230;] He tested whether his theory worked, and essentially it did not. And then he went on painting.<sup id=\"footnote-47\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"47\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"Conversation between Grete Aagaard Andersen and William Louis S\u00f8rensen, SMK Sound Archive. SMK DEP710_12-3, side B, 3 min. 40 sec.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">47<\/a><\/sup><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>To Grete Aagaard Andersen\u2019s \u00a0mind, the experiment ended up being \u2018a very big disappointment\u2019 because the listening experience did not succeed in visualising the principle of construction: the audience could not form the same immediate overview as they could in the paintings.<sup id=\"footnote-48\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"48\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"SMK DEP710_12-3, side A, 10 min. 8 sec.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">48<\/a><\/sup> According to Grete Aagaard Andersen, the experiment of letting the lines stand straight into the air, as Aagaard Andersen put it in 1971, did not succeed: the lines could not remain fixed in the listener\u2019s memory over the course of the 28 seconds devoted to each picture, but had to be supported by the visual overview provided by the slides. Whether the experiment of manifesting the construction principle of a <em>Division of the relationship of the sides <\/em>was successful or not does not seem to have affected Gunnar Aagard Andersen\u2019s outlook on either this or the other works in the series. He regarded the <em>Concerto for Five Violins and an Overhead Projector <\/em>and the paintings in the series as finished works \u2013 even if none of them necessarily succeeded in expressing the actual principle of construction without the materials getting in the way. However, in the interview from 1971, he seems to suggest that <em>Concerto for Five Violins and an Overhead Projector<\/em> came closest to being successful in this endeavour.<sup id=\"footnote-49\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"49\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"Buck 1971, 3 min. 15 sec.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">49<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<h2>Discussion<\/h2>\n<p>In 1971, Richard Winther introduced the four sound works on the two lacquer discs with this keenly honed statement: \u2018It\u2019s not music; this is painters making noise paintings.\u2019<sup id=\"footnote-50\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"50\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"Buck 1971, 23 min 38 sec.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">50<\/a><\/sup> Winther unequivocally establishes the works\u2019 status as visual art rather than music, thereby directly addressing the question of how the sound works should be heard: as music or as visual art? I let Winther chime in here to return to the question of how works are best heard \u2013 the question of what I described in the introduction, borrowing from Barthes, as the filiation of the works.<\/p>\n<p>The historical coverage and analyses of Winther and Aagaard Andersen\u2019s works have aimed to show how the sound works are closely linked with the artists\u2019 other practices. In short, I have argued that the works can be heard and read as integral parts of visual artistic practices. Perceiving them as music would indeed seem natural: they take the form of sound, are recorded in a music studio, use piano and strings in their instrumentation, have the words \u2018symphony\u2019 and \u2018concert\u2019 in their title, and, in the case of Aagaard Andersen\u2019s work, are (also) written down at sheet music! In order to more closely inspect question of the works\u2019 affiliation, I will conclude by including the thinking of two other art critics and theorists, Clement Greenberg and Hal Foster.<\/p>\n<p>Greenberg identifies a striving towards a liberation from materiality in modernist, anti-illusionist art, one which, according to him, is best achieved in constructivist sculpture. Whether such a liberation from materiality can be realised at all is certainly debatable, but in this context the most important aspect is that this striving also characterises the experiments in sound that I have discussed in this article. Although Greenberg does not address works created in sound, his description of modernism\u2019s ambitions for a liberation from materiality is a significant argument for inscribing these works in sound in an art-historical modernist tradition.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>Foster\u2019s criticism of categorical formalism within modernist art theory is also included here to support the argument about the affiliation of Winther and Aagaard Andersen\u2019s works with the art institution. Foster\u2019s argument is that the matter of a given artwork\u2019s belonging to a given category should not be determined by whether it <em>fulfils <\/em>the formal requirements set by the category, but rather by whether it <em>challenges <\/em>or <em>relates <\/em>to these. Forster\u2019s argument is thus comparable to Barthes&#8217; concept of filiation, which is based on the work\u2019s way of <em>performing <\/em>a relationship of affiliation.<\/p>\n<h3><strong>Painting, sculpture, architecture \u2013 music?<\/strong><\/h3>\n<p>In his text \u2018The New Sculpture\u2019 from 1948, revised in 1958, Clement Greenberg brings together painting, sculpture, and architecture in a discussion of the \u2018purity\u2019 that, according to him, all art forms under modernism strive towards. As a result of this striving, the modernist, anti-illusionist work seeks a reduction of physical substance in an effort to free itself from materiality. An ambition that, again according to him, is best fulfilled in Constructivist sculpture, which in his interpretation almost mysteriously becomes pure, weightless nothingness:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>To render substance entirely optical, and form, whether pictorial, sculptural or architectural, as an integral part of ambient space \u2013 this brings anti-illusionism full circle [&#8230;] in pictures whose painted surfaces are enclosed rectangles seem to expand into surrounding space; and in buildings that, apparently formed of lines alone, seem woven into the air; but better yet in Constructivist and quasi-Constructivist works of sculpture. [&#8230;] the constructor-sculptor can, literally, draw in the air with a single strand of wire that supports nothing but itself.<sup id=\"footnote-51\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"51\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"Greenberg 1973, pp. 144\u2013145.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">51<\/a><\/sup><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>In the context of this article, making a connection to music seems very obvious, but in Greenberg\u2019s thinking, the non-material idealism that underpins modernism is essentially connected to visuality, \u2018sheer visibility\u2019.<sup id=\"footnote-52\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"52\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"Greenberg 1973, p. 144.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">52<\/a><\/sup> Had this not been the case, his constructor-sculptor could quite easily be reframed as a composer-painter (with com-position understood here in the sense of combination), perhaps especially in light of the fact that for many abstract artists \u2013 from Mondrian and Kandinsky to the Danish proponents of abstraction in Linien, for example \u2013 music explicitly constituted a model for an objectless, non-referential art. A model that often appears as a metaphor and basis for comparison in texts and work titles, just as a large part of abstract art\u2019s vocabulary about composition, rhythm, harmony, and dissonance is appropriated from music.<sup id=\"footnote-53\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"53\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"This link between abstraction and music is well described (for example in Diane V. Silverthorne (ed.): <em>Music, Art and Performance from Liszt to Riot Grrrl: The Musicalization of Art,<\/em> in London 2019) and was, for example, also a central topic for the two exhibitions <em>Visual Music. Synaesthesia in Art and Music Since 1900<\/em> at the Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art in 2005 and <em>Sons &amp; Lumi\u00e8res: Une histoire du sons dans l&#8217;art du XXe si\u00e8cle<\/em> at the Centre Pompidou in 2004\u20135.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">53<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>Greenberg\u2019s position can be challenged from several angles. In particular, the last sentence of the quote provided here seems to be a kind of optical-rhetorical sleight of hand, where the physical materiality of the wire dissolves completely to become an immaterial line in the air. The striving towards a free-floating art freed from materiality identified by Greenberg is clearly present in the works treated here. Most clearly in Aagaard\u2019s case, where he sought, in his own words: \u2018a line that\u2019s free of the canvas, standing straight into the air\u2019.<sup id=\"footnote-54\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"54\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"Buck 1971, 2 min 00 sec.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">54<\/a><\/sup> Aagaard Andersen can, however, be accused of the same fallacy as Greenberg by overlooking how sound also, of course, has its own material and not least temporal properties.<\/p>\n<h3><strong>Disciplines and problems of category<\/strong><\/h3>\n<p>As regards the question of reading of the works as visual art, I will briefly incorporate the criticism that Hal Foster raises in the book <em>Return of the Real <\/em>about the categorical formalism represented by the standard-bearers of modernism such as Greenberg and the American critic Michael Fried, who was a student of Greenberg.<sup id=\"footnote-55\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"55\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"Hal Foster: <em>Return of the Real,<\/em> Cambridge 1996.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">55<\/a><\/sup> Once again, sculpture is a particularly significant point of contention, in this case minimalist sculpture, which Fried categorically rejected as failed and refused to call sculpture because he believed the works made use of a theatrical element of temporality that definitively moved them outside the category of sculpture.<sup id=\"footnote-56\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"56\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"Hal Foster 1996, pp. 40\u201344. I believe that Fried\u2019s link between the temporality of minimalism and theatre is mistaken. To my mind, the performativity of minimalism \u2013 and the performativity that entered the American art scene at the same time or soon after \u2013 comes not from the realm of theatre, but from music, mainly via composer John Cage\u2019s considerable influence on the visual arts scene. Briefly put, the temporal dimension of minimalism and performance is not adapted from theatre, but from music.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">56<\/a><\/sup> Foster points out that the temporality of minimalist sculpture threatens Fried\u2019s outlook on ordered disciplines where a real sculpture must present itself with a definite immediacy, not extend in time. Taking issue with Fried\u2019s disciplinary rigidity, Foster adopts the perspective that minimalism\u2019s challenge to disciplinary order is a deliberate epistemological probing of the category of sculpture, leading him to call Fried\u2019s rejection a category error.<sup id=\"footnote-57\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"57\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"Fried 1973, pp. 40\u201342.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">57<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>I believe that we are at risk of making a similar mistake in relation to Linien II\u2019s works if we do not listen for how they fit within the context of the artists\u2019 other practices, and instead listen to them as music on the basis of some overall formal, material considerations in relation to their being created in sound.<sup id=\"footnote-58\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"58\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"Cf. Fjelds\u00f8e 2023.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">58<\/a><\/sup> Whereas in minimalism, the object takes on a temporality in its phenomenological relation to the viewer\u2019s body \u2013 which is what makes Fried call it theatrical \u2013 Winther\u2019s and Aagaard Andersen\u2019s works assume a different, more explicit temporal extent through their substitution of the painting\u2019s oil and canvas with the sound of horns, pianos and violins as a conceptual and (self)conscious challenge and expansion of visual art\u2019s material scope \u2013 what one might call its material-space-time-scope.<sup id=\"footnote-59\" class=\"custom-footnotes-footnote\" data-sup-reference=\"59\" data-footnote-post-scope=\"post_5760\" data-sup-value=\"According to Foster, the explorative probing of art\u2019s scope for action is not solely the province of the neo-avant-garde. He believes that the historical avant-garde carries out similar investigations, but whereas those concern the conventions of art, the investigations of the neo-avant-garde concern the institutions of art (Foster 1973, p. 17). Turning to Linien II, it seems relevant that Foster considers the neo-avant-garde to fall into two waves, the first of which does not rebuild the methods of the avant-garde, but repeats them as a replay with an institutionalised effect: \u2018As the <em>first <\/em>neo-avant-garde recovers the historical avant-garde [ &#8230;] it does so often literally, through a reprise of its basic devices, the effect of which is <em>less to transform the institution of art than to transform the avant-garde into an institution.\u2019<\/em> (Foster 1973, p. 21). The question of whether Linien II could be considered to belong to such a type of first\u2013wave neo-avant-garde is an intriguing perspective but falls outside the focus and scope of this article.\"><a href=\"javascript:void(0)\"  role=\"button\" aria-pressed=\"false\" aria-describedby=\"footnote-content-post_5760\">59<\/a><\/sup><\/p>\n<p>In Aagaard Andersen\u2019s case, Greenberg\u2019s thesis about modern anti-illusionist art being characterised by a striving for a liberation from materiality appears quite precisely implemented as a strategy to escape the fact that the paintings repeatedly fell short due to overshadowing what Aagaard Andersen considered the essential aspect, namely the ideal of the principle of construction in itself. They became <em>illustrations <\/em>rather than an embodiment of the construction principle. In Richard Winther\u2019s case, the artist clearly stated his intentions about expanding painting to incorporate both time and space and thus, as a space-time modulator, making it in step with contemporary times. In both cases, the dimension of time extended in sound is added to the mix.<\/p>\n<h2>Conclusion<\/h2>\n<p>Through the above, I have tried to establish what could be called an art institutional listening position: a position which adopts the perspective that the filiation of the works addressed there, their belonging in what Arthur Danto calls the artworld, is a decisive premise for understanding their use of forms and materials that otherwise traditionally belong to music. In other words, I have tried to show how the works by Richard Winther and Gunnar Aagaard Andersen treated here belong to a visual artistic tradition. I have sought to demonstrate how the construction of the works, the circumstances of their creation, their addressing of an art public, as well as the artists\u2019 own texts and statements all show the works\u2019 filiation with visual art. If we want to listen to and understand the works, we must also be responsive to how the works position themselves.<\/p>\n<p>The works\u2019 use of sound is fundamentally conceptual in nature, not a material investigation of sound\u2019s essential properties. Rather, it takes the form of signs in a concrete-artistic semantics aimed at addressing and challenging visual arts\u2019 conventions, visual arts\u2019 spaces, visual art\u2019s modes of experience. The works\u2019 use of musical terms and instruments thus also appears as a deliberate and witty appropriation of musical tropes and as part of the works\u2019 rebellion against the institutional conventions of visual arts through non-traditional means appropriated from the vocabulary and toolbox of music.<\/p>\n<p>The sound works\u2019 conceptual experiments with transferring concrete-artistic principles of construction to sound are thus not the peripheral curiosities they have otherwise been treated as. Rather, they may be some of the most radical \u2013 and most mischievous \u2013 of Linien II\u2019s artistic experiments.<\/p>\n<h2>Perspectives for further listening<\/h2>\n<p>In the above, the concept of filiation has been used as a methodological tool to explore how Winther and Aagaard Andersen\u2019s sound works challenge the art institution and its traditions. Playfully and belligerently, this rebellion places itself in the wake of the historical avant-garde, interwar Concretism and painterly modernism, and was closely linked to the notion of and belief in artistic freedom \u2013 Art with a capital A \u2013 and its potential as a constructive creative force in the post-war period. In the upcoming work with the PhD project Dansk lydkunsts historie (Histories of Danish Sound Art), of which this article is a part, I intent to continue listening and thinking on the basis of works and recordings from the SMK sound archive, engaging in an ongoing testing, nuancing and probing of the concept of filiation established here. As applied to the works treated here, the concept of filiation does undeniably have a certain formal and categorical rigidity. How, for example, might the notion of a work\u2019s filiation be challenged by the Fluxus movement (represented in the sound archive by recordings from the Fluxus Festival in Copenhagen in 1962) with its demonstrative interdisciplinary and inter-media mixing of categories of work? Fluxus employed work categories which, in an even more pronounced and methodologically consistent way, appropriated and transplanted formats and conventions between disciplines. Another specific work that pushes and nuances the use of the concept of filiation are two radio broadcasts listed in SMK\u2019s sound archive under the titles <em>Kvinder i kunst I <\/em>and <em>Kvinder i kunst II <\/em>(Women in art I and II), produced by artist Kirsten Justesen in collaboration with editor Allan de Waal in 1975, the International Women\u2019s Year for Danish public radio. The status of these radio broadcasts as independent works of art is unclear, but they nevertheless appear as central examples of an artist working with sound. In a future article, I will listen closely to these two broadcasts, where the audio material consists primarily of voices, and where the approach is far more overtly political and concrete. These broadcasts and voices very much have things they want to say, things that are not abstract but very directly concerned with issues of representation and one\u2019s place in the world. A politically engaged artistic work, of which one might perhaps say that \u2018the objective is not to depict reality, but to change it\u2019, as is written in Danish across a print by Justesen from the same period. In the context of the present article, such world-changing ambitions (with echoes of Marx) also mirror the grand ambitions that artists from Linien II harboured for the potential of art after World War II: both Linien II and Justesen\u2019s radio broadcasts are artistic practices that aim to change the world, and both are practices that use sound as a material \u2013 but do so in very different ways.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>In 1948 and 1949, several artists from the Danish artist group Linien II created a series of experimental works in which they transferred concrete art methodologies from painting to sound.<br \/>\nThis article examines how these early examples of sound works by Danish visual artists both conform to and challenge artistic conventions and institutional logics.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":5796,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[4],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-5760","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-articles"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.2 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Free of the Canvas  Concerning two sound works by Richard Winther and Gunnar Aagaard Andersen in the SMK sound archive - Perspective<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/free-of-the-canvas-concerning-two-sound-works-by-richard-winther-and-gunnar-aagaard-andersen-in-the-smk-sound-archive\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Free of the Canvas  Concerning two sound works by Richard Winther and Gunnar Aagaard Andersen in the SMK sound archive - Perspective\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"In 1948 and 1949, several artists from the Danish artist group Linien II created a series of experimental works in which they transferred concrete art methodologies from painting to sound. This article examines how these early examples of sound works by Danish visual artists both conform to and challenge artistic conventions and institutional logics.\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:url\" content=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/free-of-the-canvas-concerning-two-sound-works-by-richard-winther-and-gunnar-aagaard-andersen-in-the-smk-sound-archive\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:site_name\" content=\"Perspective\" \/>\n<meta property=\"article:published_time\" content=\"2025-04-30T10:07:27+00:00\" \/>\n<meta property=\"article:modified_time\" content=\"2026-03-16T14:38:43+00:00\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:image\" content=\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/Udvalgt-billede1.jpg\" \/>\n\t<meta property=\"og:image:width\" content=\"1005\" \/>\n\t<meta property=\"og:image:height\" content=\"389\" \/>\n\t<meta property=\"og:image:type\" content=\"image\/jpeg\" \/>\n<meta name=\"author\" content=\"SarahSMK\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:card\" content=\"summary_large_image\" \/>\n<meta name=\"twitter:label1\" content=\"Written by\" \/>\n\t<meta name=\"twitter:data1\" content=\"SarahSMK\" \/>\n\t<meta name=\"twitter:label2\" content=\"Est. reading time\" \/>\n\t<meta name=\"twitter:data2\" content=\"68 minutes\" \/>\n<script type=\"application\/ld+json\" class=\"yoast-schema-graph\">{\"@context\":\"https:\/\/schema.org\",\"@graph\":[{\"@type\":\"Article\",\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/free-of-the-canvas-concerning-two-sound-works-by-richard-winther-and-gunnar-aagaard-andersen-in-the-smk-sound-archive\/#article\",\"isPartOf\":{\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/free-of-the-canvas-concerning-two-sound-works-by-richard-winther-and-gunnar-aagaard-andersen-in-the-smk-sound-archive\/\"},\"author\":{\"name\":\"SarahSMK\",\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/#\/schema\/person\/79eb250ea4eff30fce590dbfd33503fe\"},\"headline\":\"Free of the Canvas Concerning two sound works by Richard Winther and Gunnar Aagaard Andersen in the SMK sound archive\",\"datePublished\":\"2025-04-30T10:07:27+00:00\",\"dateModified\":\"2026-03-16T14:38:43+00:00\",\"mainEntityOfPage\":{\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/free-of-the-canvas-concerning-two-sound-works-by-richard-winther-and-gunnar-aagaard-andersen-in-the-smk-sound-archive\/\"},\"wordCount\":13064,\"image\":{\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/free-of-the-canvas-concerning-two-sound-works-by-richard-winther-and-gunnar-aagaard-andersen-in-the-smk-sound-archive\/#primaryimage\"},\"thumbnailUrl\":\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/Udvalgt-billede1.jpg\",\"articleSection\":[\"Articles\"],\"inLanguage\":\"en-US\"},{\"@type\":\"WebPage\",\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/free-of-the-canvas-concerning-two-sound-works-by-richard-winther-and-gunnar-aagaard-andersen-in-the-smk-sound-archive\/\",\"url\":\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/free-of-the-canvas-concerning-two-sound-works-by-richard-winther-and-gunnar-aagaard-andersen-in-the-smk-sound-archive\/\",\"name\":\"Free of the Canvas Concerning two sound works by Richard Winther and Gunnar Aagaard Andersen in the SMK sound archive - Perspective\",\"isPartOf\":{\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/#website\"},\"primaryImageOfPage\":{\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/free-of-the-canvas-concerning-two-sound-works-by-richard-winther-and-gunnar-aagaard-andersen-in-the-smk-sound-archive\/#primaryimage\"},\"image\":{\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/free-of-the-canvas-concerning-two-sound-works-by-richard-winther-and-gunnar-aagaard-andersen-in-the-smk-sound-archive\/#primaryimage\"},\"thumbnailUrl\":\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/Udvalgt-billede1.jpg\",\"datePublished\":\"2025-04-30T10:07:27+00:00\",\"dateModified\":\"2026-03-16T14:38:43+00:00\",\"author\":{\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/#\/schema\/person\/79eb250ea4eff30fce590dbfd33503fe\"},\"inLanguage\":\"en-US\",\"potentialAction\":[{\"@type\":\"ReadAction\",\"target\":[\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/free-of-the-canvas-concerning-two-sound-works-by-richard-winther-and-gunnar-aagaard-andersen-in-the-smk-sound-archive\/\"]}]},{\"@type\":\"ImageObject\",\"inLanguage\":\"en-US\",\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/free-of-the-canvas-concerning-two-sound-works-by-richard-winther-and-gunnar-aagaard-andersen-in-the-smk-sound-archive\/#primaryimage\",\"url\":\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/Udvalgt-billede1.jpg\",\"contentUrl\":\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/Udvalgt-billede1.jpg\",\"width\":1005,\"height\":389},{\"@type\":\"WebSite\",\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/#website\",\"url\":\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/\",\"name\":\"Perspective\",\"description\":\"Perspective Journal\",\"potentialAction\":[{\"@type\":\"SearchAction\",\"target\":{\"@type\":\"EntryPoint\",\"urlTemplate\":\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/?s={search_term_string}\"},\"query-input\":{\"@type\":\"PropertyValueSpecification\",\"valueRequired\":true,\"valueName\":\"search_term_string\"}}],\"inLanguage\":\"en-US\"},{\"@type\":\"Person\",\"@id\":\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/#\/schema\/person\/79eb250ea4eff30fce590dbfd33503fe\",\"name\":\"SarahSMK\",\"image\":{\"@type\":\"ImageObject\",\"inLanguage\":\"en-US\",\"@id\":\"https:\/\/secure.gravatar.com\/avatar\/d383cbf88c7b7450a537c3ad4e41b5f1b293ab9bb603bcfab056625807fb121a?s=96&d=mm&r=g\",\"url\":\"https:\/\/secure.gravatar.com\/avatar\/d383cbf88c7b7450a537c3ad4e41b5f1b293ab9bb603bcfab056625807fb121a?s=96&d=mm&r=g\",\"contentUrl\":\"https:\/\/secure.gravatar.com\/avatar\/d383cbf88c7b7450a537c3ad4e41b5f1b293ab9bb603bcfab056625807fb121a?s=96&d=mm&r=g\",\"caption\":\"SarahSMK\"},\"url\":\"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/author\/sarahsmk\/\"}]}<\/script>\n<!-- \/ Yoast SEO plugin. -->","yoast_head_json":{"title":"Free of the Canvas  Concerning two sound works by Richard Winther and Gunnar Aagaard Andersen in the SMK sound archive - Perspective","robots":{"index":"index","follow":"follow","max-snippet":"max-snippet:-1","max-image-preview":"max-image-preview:large","max-video-preview":"max-video-preview:-1"},"canonical":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/free-of-the-canvas-concerning-two-sound-works-by-richard-winther-and-gunnar-aagaard-andersen-in-the-smk-sound-archive\/","og_locale":"en_US","og_type":"article","og_title":"Free of the Canvas  Concerning two sound works by Richard Winther and Gunnar Aagaard Andersen in the SMK sound archive - Perspective","og_description":"In 1948 and 1949, several artists from the Danish artist group Linien II created a series of experimental works in which they transferred concrete art methodologies from painting to sound. This article examines how these early examples of sound works by Danish visual artists both conform to and challenge artistic conventions and institutional logics.","og_url":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/free-of-the-canvas-concerning-two-sound-works-by-richard-winther-and-gunnar-aagaard-andersen-in-the-smk-sound-archive\/","og_site_name":"Perspective","article_published_time":"2025-04-30T10:07:27+00:00","article_modified_time":"2026-03-16T14:38:43+00:00","og_image":[{"width":1005,"height":389,"url":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/Udvalgt-billede1.jpg","type":"image\/jpeg"}],"author":"SarahSMK","twitter_card":"summary_large_image","twitter_misc":{"Written by":"SarahSMK","Est. reading time":"68 minutes"},"schema":{"@context":"https:\/\/schema.org","@graph":[{"@type":"Article","@id":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/free-of-the-canvas-concerning-two-sound-works-by-richard-winther-and-gunnar-aagaard-andersen-in-the-smk-sound-archive\/#article","isPartOf":{"@id":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/free-of-the-canvas-concerning-two-sound-works-by-richard-winther-and-gunnar-aagaard-andersen-in-the-smk-sound-archive\/"},"author":{"name":"SarahSMK","@id":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/#\/schema\/person\/79eb250ea4eff30fce590dbfd33503fe"},"headline":"Free of the Canvas Concerning two sound works by Richard Winther and Gunnar Aagaard Andersen in the SMK sound archive","datePublished":"2025-04-30T10:07:27+00:00","dateModified":"2026-03-16T14:38:43+00:00","mainEntityOfPage":{"@id":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/free-of-the-canvas-concerning-two-sound-works-by-richard-winther-and-gunnar-aagaard-andersen-in-the-smk-sound-archive\/"},"wordCount":13064,"image":{"@id":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/free-of-the-canvas-concerning-two-sound-works-by-richard-winther-and-gunnar-aagaard-andersen-in-the-smk-sound-archive\/#primaryimage"},"thumbnailUrl":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/Udvalgt-billede1.jpg","articleSection":["Articles"],"inLanguage":"en-US"},{"@type":"WebPage","@id":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/free-of-the-canvas-concerning-two-sound-works-by-richard-winther-and-gunnar-aagaard-andersen-in-the-smk-sound-archive\/","url":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/free-of-the-canvas-concerning-two-sound-works-by-richard-winther-and-gunnar-aagaard-andersen-in-the-smk-sound-archive\/","name":"Free of the Canvas Concerning two sound works by Richard Winther and Gunnar Aagaard Andersen in the SMK sound archive - Perspective","isPartOf":{"@id":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/#website"},"primaryImageOfPage":{"@id":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/free-of-the-canvas-concerning-two-sound-works-by-richard-winther-and-gunnar-aagaard-andersen-in-the-smk-sound-archive\/#primaryimage"},"image":{"@id":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/free-of-the-canvas-concerning-two-sound-works-by-richard-winther-and-gunnar-aagaard-andersen-in-the-smk-sound-archive\/#primaryimage"},"thumbnailUrl":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/Udvalgt-billede1.jpg","datePublished":"2025-04-30T10:07:27+00:00","dateModified":"2026-03-16T14:38:43+00:00","author":{"@id":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/#\/schema\/person\/79eb250ea4eff30fce590dbfd33503fe"},"inLanguage":"en-US","potentialAction":[{"@type":"ReadAction","target":["https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/free-of-the-canvas-concerning-two-sound-works-by-richard-winther-and-gunnar-aagaard-andersen-in-the-smk-sound-archive\/"]}]},{"@type":"ImageObject","inLanguage":"en-US","@id":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/free-of-the-canvas-concerning-two-sound-works-by-richard-winther-and-gunnar-aagaard-andersen-in-the-smk-sound-archive\/#primaryimage","url":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/Udvalgt-billede1.jpg","contentUrl":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/04\/Udvalgt-billede1.jpg","width":1005,"height":389},{"@type":"WebSite","@id":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/#website","url":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/","name":"Perspective","description":"Perspective Journal","potentialAction":[{"@type":"SearchAction","target":{"@type":"EntryPoint","urlTemplate":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/?s={search_term_string}"},"query-input":{"@type":"PropertyValueSpecification","valueRequired":true,"valueName":"search_term_string"}}],"inLanguage":"en-US"},{"@type":"Person","@id":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/#\/schema\/person\/79eb250ea4eff30fce590dbfd33503fe","name":"SarahSMK","image":{"@type":"ImageObject","inLanguage":"en-US","@id":"https:\/\/secure.gravatar.com\/avatar\/d383cbf88c7b7450a537c3ad4e41b5f1b293ab9bb603bcfab056625807fb121a?s=96&d=mm&r=g","url":"https:\/\/secure.gravatar.com\/avatar\/d383cbf88c7b7450a537c3ad4e41b5f1b293ab9bb603bcfab056625807fb121a?s=96&d=mm&r=g","contentUrl":"https:\/\/secure.gravatar.com\/avatar\/d383cbf88c7b7450a537c3ad4e41b5f1b293ab9bb603bcfab056625807fb121a?s=96&d=mm&r=g","caption":"SarahSMK"},"url":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/author\/sarahsmk\/"}]}},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/5760","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=5760"}],"version-history":[{"count":17,"href":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/5760\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":6316,"href":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/5760\/revisions\/6316"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/5796"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=5760"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=5760"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.perspectivejournal.dk\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=5760"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}