A tower of 800 whispering radios: Cildo Meireles’ Babel at the Tate Modern, London

A tower of 800 noisy radios: Cildo Meireles Babel at the Tate Modern, London, May 2016

I loved this installation at the Tate Modern by Brazilian conceptual artist, Cildo Meireles.

The work takes the form of a tower constructed from 800 radios, each one tuned to a different channel and set at the minimum volume to which it is audible.

A tower of 800 noisy radios: Cildo Meireles Babel at the Tate Modern, London, May 2016

The Tate’s website explains the message behind the structure, which was built in 2001:

[The work] …relates to the biblical story of the Tower of Babel: a tower tall enough to reach the heavens.

Affronted by this structure, God caused the builders to speak in different languages and, ceasing to understand one another, become divided and scattered across the earth. According to myth, this inability to communicate became the cause of all mankind’s conflicts.

A tower of 800 noisy radios: Cildo Meireles Babel at the Tate Modern, London, May 2016

Babel consists of around 800 radios of varying ages, from the large, valve radios which make up the bottom tiers of the tower to the smaller mass-produced electronic radios of recent years at the top, with their small size emphasising the height of the work.

With the tower presenting examples of radios from the 1920s to the present day, the artist has described it as ‘an archaeological sample of events’.

A tower of 800 noisy radios: Cildo Meireles Babel at the Tate Modern, London, May 2016

Due to the time-based nature of the medium of radio, no two experiences of this work are ever the same.

A tower of 800 noisy radios: Cildo Meireles Babel at the Tate Modern, London, May 2016

The work reminded me of, ‘1001 TV Sets (End Piece)’, 1972-2012,’ a work by video art pioneer David Hall which featured over 1,000 TV sets, all tuned to random terrestrial stations.

A tower of 800 noisy radios: Cildo Meireles Babel at the Tate Modern, London, May 2016

A tower of 800 noisy radios: Cildo Meireles Babel at the Tate Modern, London, May 2016

A tower of 800 noisy radios: Cildo Meireles Babel at the Tate Modern, London, May 2016

A tower of 800 noisy radios: Cildo Meireles Babel at the Tate Modern, London, May 2016

Bottom tier valve radios.

A tower of 800 noisy radios: Cildo Meireles Babel at the Tate Modern, London, May 2016

Hipster ‘tache.

A tower of 800 noisy radios: Cildo Meireles Babel at the Tate Modern, London, May 2016

A tower of 800 noisy radios: Cildo Meireles Babel at the Tate Modern, London, May 2016

A tower of 800 noisy radios: Cildo Meireles Babel at the Tate Modern, London, May 2016

A tower of 800 noisy radios: Cildo Meireles Babel at the Tate Modern, London, May 2016

Background: 

More: Tate Modern – Cildo Meirles

3 Comments on “A tower of 800 whispering radios: Cildo Meireles’ Babel at the Tate Modern, London”

  1. i just cant see the point of this walk a hundred yards down the road and see a pile of black bin bags the persons who did this would do better using there time picking up the rubbish a picture of that would go down better with the public

    1. Come on amon. If you can’t see the point of art then you can’t see the point of life. This work has brought pleasure to an awful lot of people and it’s trite and insulting to suggest that they’d be better off picking up rubbish. That’s no different to me saying you’d be better off picking up rubbish than posting here.

      Besides, perhaps he does pick up rubbish in his spare time 🙂

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