TIM HAWKINSON: It’s something that emotes and it’s motorized and it is an emoter. I can’t make most of these faces myself. It’s using my face because  that’s readily available and I have exclusive rights to my face. It seemed I guess honest to just use my own face. I just took my digital camera and held it out. Just took a bunch of shots. I took it into the developer  and he put it on a screen and we Photoshopped all the features. We blanked out the mouth and  the nostrils and the eyes. So I had just this egghead, this, with  no features, just thinking that I’d… I’d want to start with a blank face. And then I’d overlay the, the features and the other three kind of donor photographs. The brain of the piece, or the driver, is just picking up the light and  dark patterns on the television and there are nineteen of these little suction cups that have little light  sensitive switches in them. So when a certain area of the screen is dark, it triggers these different mechanisms. It actually triggers a motor in the face. Sometimes the manipulations are very slight, Depending just on what’s  coming through the TV channel. When there’s a sporting event with lots of  activity, the face can be pretty emotional. I use my image or my body in a lot  of the work as a jumping-off point, but usually the end result  is so abstracted that I… I don’t really feel so  identified with it any longer. It’s not about my identity, but it’s  about our identity and our experiences within our bodies and our bodies’  relationship to the external world. Sometimes we do get rain in L.A., and a lot of us aren’t really prepared for rain. So it was really great, just  walking into the studio one time, and there were buckets around,  all catching the, the drips. It just had a great sound in the space. So I was interested in using  dripping water in some way. And I didn’t want just random drips, I  wanted something that you could dance to. Something kind of choreographed-sounding. So I ended up making this I guess it’s  sort of– it’s sort of a drumming machine. The signal is sent from the mechanism  over here to, to this cable. To the different valves. And then the water is collected in these buckets. So I put in these little pie tins which create  sort of a resonator, really give a nice loud drip. The signal originates with these gears. Each gear has a little knob on it, a little bump. Each gear also is paired up with a switch. Different switches come in contact with the  bump on the gear and give it a different pulse. It’s not even electronics.  I don’t know what it is. It’s wiring, I think what it  is is just making circuits. The copper tape represents  all the different possible permutations of three combinations of gears. Some of these pieces have become a little more  complex and they’re trying to do more things. And then it’s sent through,  I think this cylinder here. Those are the main aspects of the work that  end up having problems and breaking down. So, maybe I need to go back to school  or actually take a course in it. I was just thinking of this sort of creature that’s allowed to grow in  a zero gravity environment. And now it’s being hung out to dry. This form kind of grew out as a three-dimensional  kind of expansion out of some drawings that I was working on. Actually using a drill to spin a pencil around. You can see that the pencil  lead was spinning around. And I was able to open and close  the diameter of the spin while it was in motion. And so I was able to create drawings that were almost kind  of reminiscent of intestines or worms. There’s a certain freshness in a drawing where you’re seeing something for the first time and, so in my work I, I tried to  maintain some of that freshness and keep shifting what it is that  I’m looking at to see it differently or creating a different  process of looking at something that gives me a new kind of interpretation. I don’t use preliminary drawings  for pieces. I, well maybe I, I can’t think that far in advance and really  visualize the piece in a finished state. I find it much freer to go right  in and start making the piece. I just said that I never make preliminary studies or anything but I did make models of balloons. That process involved being  approached by MASS MOCA and they wondered what I would do with a space that was basically the size of a football field. I just came up with this  idea of using inflatables. I think I was just a little nervous about  filling fifteen thousand square feet, I didn’t want to get caught short handed. So I felt much better seeing  these little models in the space. It was going to have a real  strong physical presence, but I felt like it needed to  also have this audible component. There was a great moment when it  was finally up and, and playing. For me it was just like hearing the first horn. I was really concerned that we  would have enough air pressure to activate the reeds to really  get a good tone out of them but that we wouldn’t like pop any balloons. Something that large really does have to be under a tremendous amount of air pressure to  get, you know, a sound out of a reed. I used fishing net and tailored  that around the balloons and I was able to further  define and cinch them in. It was neat—it really was a quick way  of controlling a huge amount of volume. MASS MOCA was one big long kind of narrow space. The gallery in New York was  divided into like six rooms: one gigantic room and slightly smaller  rooms. I was afraid that the sound quality might be lost, but in the end I was really happy with the sound. Each whatever note this is just  plays one on the Uberorgan… There was a time when he made folk  musical instruments for instance. He took banjo lessons and that was, he  was probably about 12 or something. I’ve been interested in music  for most of my life I guess. At one point I thought maybe I  would be a musical instrument maker. I’d made a, a mandolin and a guitar. The keyboard consists basically  of these photosensitive switches. So by covering one of the switches, blocking  out the light, you’d trigger one of the notes. So you can stop it at a blank space and play  it like a piano. It’s all based on a score that I put  together using lots of old church hymns and Sailor’s Hornpipe and Swan Lake. So I grew up hearing these old Protestant hymns, and some of them are really beautiful  and they have strong connotations, and also, you know, reflect faith.