Brandon Clifford’s Filament: Megaphones at the New York Philharmonic

2018 Fay Chandler Creativity Grant

Workshop at the American Academy in Rome of Filament, June 2018. Photo: Brandon Clifford.
Workshop at the American Academy in Rome of Filament, June 2018. Photo: Brandon Clifford.
Workshop at the American Academy in Rome of Filament, June 2018. Photo: Brandon Clifford.
Workshop at the American Academy in Rome of Filament, June 2018. Photo: Brandon Clifford.

Breaking the proscenium tradition of the symphony

About the Project

Brandon Clifford, MIT Assistant Professor of Architecture and principal at Matter Design, and Ashley Fure, Dartmouth College Assistant Professor of Music, have designed and fabricated megaphones to distribute the visceral power of sound to the far reaches of a concert hall in a project titled Filament: Megaphones at the New York Philharmonic. Fure is a composer of acoustic and electroacoustic concert music as well as intermedia art. Her work explores the kinetic source of sound, bringing focus to the muscular act of music making and the vital behaviors of raw acoustic matter.

Clifford and Fure create a family of unique megaphones to break the proscenium tradition of the symphony, where action is frontal and ticket prices increase toward the stage. Fifteen choir singers carrying megaphones move throughout the audience as the work unfolds. The megaphones they carry, wirelessly lit with LEDs, help them muster a sonic and visual presence that rivals the orchestra on stage. Filament premiered during the opening of the New York Philharmonic’s 2018–19 season and was presented at MIT during spring 2019.

More about the project at the NYPhil.org

Schedule

Past Events

Filament: Megaphones at the New York Philharmonic
September 21, 22 and 25, 2018
New York Philharmonic
David Geffen Hall, 10 Lincoln Center Plaza, New York, NY

Tickets and more information at NYPhil.org

Biography

Brandon Clifford is an Assistant Professor at MIT and a principal at Matter Design. Clifford received his Master of Architecture from Princeton University in 2011 and his Bachelor of Science in Architecture from Georgia Tech in 2006. From 2006 to 2009, he worked as project manager at Office dA (NADAAA) in both Boston and New York. Clifford also served as editor of Pidgin Magazine from 2009 to 2011 and as the 2011–12 LeFevre Emerging Practitioner Fellow at the Ohio State University Knowlton School of Architecture.

In 2008, Clifford founded the award-winning practice Matter Design with Wes McGee. The practice solidified with Matter Design’s success in design competitions such as the international West Cork Arts Center competition and the provocative winning entry for the 10up competition, Periscope: Foam Tower.

Clifford is a highly acclaimed designer winning prizes such as the Design Biennial Boston, the Architectural League Prize for Young Architects and Designers, as well as the prestigious SOM Prize launching an ongoing research project into volumetric architecture. His work is published widely in journals, magazines and conference proceedings. Clifford’s recent books include Young Architects 15: Range, Archive: Design Biennial Boston, Performative Materials in Architecture and Design, Stereotomy: Stone Architecture and New Research and New Fundamentals of Natural Architecture. His recent authored work includes Volume: Bringing Surface into Question, Range: Matter Design and Volumetric Robotics: MIT Architectural Design Workshop. Clifford is dedicated to re-imagining the role of the architect in the digital era.

More at the artist’s website: Brandon Clifford