Originally featured on: http://www.ldncard.com/blog/reeps-one-debut-art-exhibition
A.D.O (Attention, Deficit and Order) is
Reeps One aka Harry Yeff debut art exhibition that brings his musical talent -
beat boxing - into the visual art world. Winner of the numerous beatbox championships
and described by NME as a “vocal percussion on another level”, Yeff managed to
impress spectators last night through his cleverly fresh exhibition that was
categorized into four aspects: ‘visual art, sonic musical performance, the
union of the audio and visual and the theoretical, neurological and anatomical
insight.’ The exhibition may sound like a mouth full, but turned back cap Yeff
spoke to everyone and anyone about his art, bringing clarity and order to what
appeared disorderly.
Yeff is original, as a performance artist and
visual artist that can talk articulately about why and how he creates what he
does. The force behind the exhibition derives from Yeff’s past where he was
initially diagnosed with Attention Deficit Disorder and dyslexia at a very young
age. However, by human error, he was told later on that it was a
misdiagnosis. Through this experience,
he expresses how irrelevant labels and names are in people’s mental processes,
which society says otherwise.
As you enter the exhibition, you see a flawless girl’s face photographed
by Ben Hopper, with thick pen marks and trails prescribed by Yeff called ‘Slant Array#3.’ Then, enter the first room with a chess board
in the centre surrounded by a mass of what looks like graffiti art through over
indulgent black felt tip pen marks and cartoon drawings on large white pieces
of paper. However, on closer inspection, it’s actually logical. Yeff’s piece,
‘Beatbox Theory’ presents his thought processes and musical sequences when
producing sounds with his mouth. Through ‘Marks and Thought Process,’ a
collection of 12 paper drawings, Yeff explained how the chessboard and its players
go through a paradox when strategizing which pieces to move that suddenly
transform into a spontaneous reaction which represents his thinking process as he draws.
In one room, viewers can watch videos of Yeff
producing art, beat boxing in the studio and performing at the Elgar Rooms at
the Royal Albert Hall. In another room, there was an opportunity for people to
attempt beat boxing on the mike and watch their vocal cords produce symmetrical
cymatic patterns.
Some may think Yeff’s
art conveniently sits with Banksy and Shepard Fairey but since he is an established music artist as well, his work won't need to fit in. He has set a new trend, which he has clearly
conveyed. The exhibition runs until the 27th but this
Saturday 22nd he shall be drawing live and beatboxing in the dark.
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