Björk's ready for a not so quiet night at the museum
The Icelandic star wants to educate as well as entertain
Wednesday 25 January 2012
Latest in Features
Related stories
On Facebook
Arts & Ents blogs
Disclosure: We’d never even been to a club when we made our first single
For most of us, reaching eighteen years of age opens up a new world for exploration, spontaneity and...
Something For The Weekend in London: May 25 – May 27
With 20+ degree weather expected to last all weekend in the capital, we'd be silly not to make the m...
George Fitzgerald: I love having stuff that other people don’t have
London beatsmith, George Fitzgerald, concocts a shadowy brew of garage, house and techno that has th...
Björk can't get enough of museums. The Icelandic songstress is set to sing about zombie snails, and more from her acclaimed Biophilia album, at New York's Hall of Science next month. And she's revealed that she's in discussions with other museums around the world to take the show to them too.
Biophilia's first airing came at last summer's Manchester International Festival. That residency took place in an apt venue – Lower Campfield Market Hall in the post-industrial Castlefield district, a building that now serves as Manchester Museum of Science and Industry's Air and Space Gallery.
Those nights at the museum gave Björk a taste for more. "I went around and looked at a lot of venues. But this one [New York's Hall of Science] was the most interesting," she explains in between rehearsals for the New York shows. "Because of the educational angle of Biophilia we really needed to collaborate on the science side of things. We take care of the musicology and the music teaching."
The 46-year-old Reykjavik-born musician will play six shows at the museum next month. "The Great Hall – which is a tower of blue glass built for the World's Fair – hasn't really been used for concerts, which is a bit of a mystery," she ponders. Indeed, the Hall of Science is one of the only living legacies on the site of the 1964-65 Fair at Flushing Meadow Corona Park in Queens. The Fair became infamous for its wildly optimistic, corporate-sponsored vision of a futuristic America. The park boasted a predictable excess of phallic towers, plus elephantine Technicolor dioramas and Jetsons-style robotic car rides through fantastical worlds overflowing with advanced household gadgets.
Almost all of those bristling Mad Men-era structures have sadly succumbed to the wrecking ball, but the Hall of Science remains to this day. The fairground's two most phallic objects of all – Nasa's Mercury and Gemini space rockets – are parked up forever in the lot in front of the building. But what is it about performing Biophilia in museums that appeals to Björk? "Well, since I started writing this album three and a half years ago, it always had an educational, a David Attenborough, a science, a natural history museum angle to it." Indeed, that album itself is a rigorous, scientific affair. Listening to its songs in suitably scientific surroundings makes sense. Says Björk: "The core of it [Biophilia] is comparing structures in nature with musical structures. So these buildings seemed a natural home."
The sensory pleasure of a meal or a kiss can be heightened by the building in which you enjoy them. And relevant architecture can add much to a gig too. Björk isn't the first bookish artist to play at a museum. The Strokes played at The Natural History Museum in 2006 and Blur began their 2009 comeback tour at the East Anglian Railway Museum. In September last year, the Birmingham Laptop Ensemble performed avant-garde electronica in the Victorian civic splendour of the city's Museum & Art Gallery.
For Björk, the Hall Of Science run next month is just the start of what could turn into a worldwide odyssey. Interested museums in all four corners of the globe had better get in touch soon though – as she explains: "We are talking to natural history museums, science museums and technological museums around the world - and will probably end up collaborating with those that are most enthusiastic about the educational program.'
That education programme is clearly close to the singer's heart. She jokes: "The one in Iceland went so well that the city [of Reykjavik] offered to put it on its curriculum for middle school pupils for the next three years!"
Björk, Hall of Science, New York (bjork.com) 3 to 18 February
- 1 Publishing: Rude bits in disguise
- 2 One is nipping to Tesco: Jubilant Jubilee royals as seen by Alison Jackson
- 3 The 100 favourite fictional characters... as chosen by 100 literary luminaries
- 4 A dark day for goths (in a good way)
- 5 The London 2012 Festival: The greatest show of a great year
- 6 The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel (12A)
- 7 French philosopher Bernard-Henri Lévy calls for West to intervene in Syria
- 8 Free Range: Meet the designers of tomorrow
- 9 Nazis, nannies and hair omelettes: Leonora Carrington, the last living Surrealist, looks back on her extraordinary life and times
- 10 Ladyhawke: Asperger's and the anxious pop sensation
- 1 Mark Zuckerberg saved $111m by selling Facebook shares before stock slumped
- 2 Brazil rocked by abortion for 9-year-old rape victim
- 3 Society: The only way is Finland
- 4 Schoolboy spiked brownies with cannabis in cookery class
- 5 FSA 'powerless' over JP Morgan
- 6 48 Hours In: Faro
- 7 'Hello mum, this is going to be hard for you to read ...'
- 8 African monkey meat that could be behind the next HIV
- 9 Coke reveals its secret: It may need to carry a cancer warning
- 10 French in uproar over oral sex anti-smoking posters
Experience the Heineken Hub
Get free wi-fi and exclusive i content while you enjoy a tasty pint of Heineken at participating pubs.
Can you imagine a career in teaching?
Be inspired to teach - let real teachers show you how rewarding the job can be.
Playing a game-changing role during the Games
Cisco is providing the solutions for London 2012's complex IT needs.
Enter the latest Independent competitions
Win anything from gadgets to five-star holidays on our competitions and offers page.
Business videos from commercial thought leaders
Watch the best in the business world give their insights into the world of business.
Career Services
Ridley Scott: The most macho man in movies?
Gallic gourmets put France back on culinary map
The outsider: Margaret Howell
For men only: A pilgrimage to Mount Athos
Feeding a hungry world – or meddling with laws of nature?



Comments