Digital Breath: Video and Sound Art in the Age of Global Connectivity. 
Newport Art Museum, February 6-June 6, 2021
As we approached the edge of 2020 with a hopeful but unsettling view of 2021, we wondered if it would be the year that we find a cure for COVID. Would this be the year of handshakes and hearty embraces, of being comfortable in the presence of others? Would 2021 be the year in which winter is allowed to be winter, social, political and ideological fires won’t rage, and borders are just lines in the earth? Would this be the year in which walls come down and we welcome our fellow comrades of all nationalities into our land or would the walls get bigger and stronger, dashing all possibilities of a new life in this nation? Will we be kept in our houses, our rooms, our mental cubicles, to speak and breathe only through the digital realm? You see the green light on your computer, so that means you are live. You ask, “Am I speaking and breathing right?” As I prepared materials for this exhibition I turned to the poetry of the late Mark Strand for guidance, in particular the poem, “Breath.” The last line of “Breath” reads: “that breath is what I send them when I send my love.” You labor to breathe through your mask, glasses fog, periphery obfuscated— should you insert an emoji here for protection, how do you express your love 6 feet apart? The line in the poem by Mark Strand reminds us to revisit the very breath we take as we join together to make the world stronger at this unprecedented moment.The 6 artists who have joined me for this exhibition—Annu Palakunnathu Matthew, Steven Subotnick, John Devault, Daniel O’Neill, Lauren Mantecón, and Andrea Pérez Bessin—are all addressing the idea of “digital breath/e” and what this means as we enter a new year challenged by COVID. As I begin to think about the work that I will create for this show and I continue to speak with the other artists (through email and Zoom) about their work, I begin to realize that we will find ourselves fully immersed as artists in the issues that confront all of us on a daily basis. Breathing is being, elemental, and leads to a form of communication. In Digital Breath at the Newport Art Museum, 7 artists are communicating with their digital breath.”
Guest Curator, Brian C O'Malley
Review by Ron Fortier in Artscope Magazine, May/June 2021
here and beyond; requiem for 2020. Video by Brian C O'Malley. Sound design by John DeVault. 2:26. 2021
forgiveness. Background painting and spoken word by Lauren Mantecón. Sound design by John DeVault. Video and animation by Brian C O'Malley. 2:57. 2020

crossroads. Video still. Daniel O'Neill

edge, video still. Steven Subotnick.https://vimeo.com/268353819

Annu Palakunnathu Matthew, installation view of "to majority/minority," IPad Pro Photo animation embedded in a handmade book, courtesy of the artist and sepiaEYE, NYC

navigating the fog, soundscape, 7:06, 2021-----audio contributors: Joseph Fortune, John DeVault, and Brian C O'Malley; sound design by Brian C O'Malley. A ghost ship sets off on a journey with no port of destination.

installation view, Newport Art Museum, 2021

Andrea Pérez Bessin, installation view at the Newport Art Museum, 2021

Andrea Pérez Bessin, installation view at the Newport Art Museum, 2021

installation shot of the sound dome with an audio work by John DeVault and both Lauren Mantecón and Annu Palakunnathu Mathhew's work in the background

installation shot of the work of Steven Subotnick and Daniel O'Neill (left side)

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