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m H z

  • About
    • bio
    • press
    • contact
  • Works
    • installation / performance / sound-sculpture
    • releases / albums / singles
    • calendar
  • Publications

selected works


Cruise Missile Intersectionality | audiovisual liveset | 2024–5

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double vision / international symposium on electronic art | brisbane powerhouse

nz edition | adam art gallery | 2025


Brutalist Noise Ensemble v2 | audiovisual performance | 2023

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Ωhm festival 2023 | brisbane powerhouse


Material Sequencer | sound-sculpture | 2020-2022

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shortlisted for aesthetica art prize 2024

leerraum | design boom | creative applications


Material Music | installation | 2019-2020

“Material Music” is an audiovisual installation developed in an effort to underscore the significance of physical materiality within the field of object-based sound art. The work consists of a linear array of eight kinetic sound- sculptures, each of which is comprised of an electromechanically-excited block of solid matter. While all eight units are identical in terms of design, functionality, and aesthetics, they each utilize a different type of physical material: brass, copper, aluminium, steel, hardwood, softwood, glass, and marble. In each unit, the material block is affixed on top of a rectangular box, with an identical electromechanical actuator mounted at both ends. The base box encloses the wiring, circuitry, and a custom-designed driver board that is connected to a micro-controller. The micro-controller is programmed to operate the actuators. Once an actuator receives a signal, its plunger shoots out and the small hammer that is screwed to the end of the shaft makes audible contact with the material block. As such, the only sonic material used in the work is derived from the mechanical actuation of the materials. In parallel, the materials themselves – and the entire mechanical process leading to their acoustic excitement – are on full display. The piece is a process-based composition rooted in Steve Reich’s pulse music and phase-shifting strategies. To further emphasize the role of the constituent materials, the phase-shifting criterion in “Material Music” is itself a derivative of a key sonic property of its materials: the speed of sound travelling through solid matters. At the start of the piece, all sixteen actuators begin to excite the material blocks synchronously, at the rate of once per second (1 Hz). The left-hand side actuator in each unit continues to retain this rate during the piece. In contrast, the signals received by the actuators on the right-hand side of each block are subtly and continually delayed with each subsequent pulse. The delay time for each unit is derived from the speed of sound travelling through the specific material type, and is programmed into the micro-controller on the driver board. Accordingly, each sound sculpture operates based on a unique delay time unit, and with every pulse, the delay time between the left and right actuation instances grows by an increasing multiple of this unit. As the piece develops, the accumulating delay times gradually shift the actuation pulses out of phase. With the passing of time, the delay offsets become more and more audible and visible. As the actuators on the left-hand side of the unit lock the downbeat to the strict rate of 1 Hz throughout, the actuations of the right-hand side solenoids are increasingly delayed, producing rhythmic patterns that morph in and out of phase across all eight sound sculptures. In this way, “Material Music” is a process-based composition that interlocks a steady pulse with ever-changing phasing audiovisual patterns that themselves derive from the very essence of the constituent audiovisual materials. Concept, design, development: Mo H. Zareei
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international symposium on electronic art | aesthetica art prize [longlist] | ars electronica garden aotearoa

 

Omega | light and sound sculpture | 2018 | technical earth

performance | aotearoa audio arts festival | city gallery wellington | wellington, new zealand | sep 2018

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the wire | streaming museum


Function | audiovisual | 2018

performance | set x ctm festival | azadi hall | tehran, iran | jun 2018

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interference [dac] | audiovisual installation | 2017–2018 | technical earth

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installation | lux festival | cuba street | wellington, new zealand | may 2017

Audiovisual installation by TECHNICAL EARTH :: mo h. zareei | jim murphy Wellington LUX 2017
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creative applications | radio new zealand


Brutalist Noise Ensemble | light and sound-sculpture series | 2015–2017

http://streamingmuseum.org/mh-zareei/ http://www.m-h-z.net
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performance | modern body festival | theatre de regentes | the hague, netherlands | dec 2016

an audiovisual performance by mo h. zareei 02 december 2016 theater de nieuwe regentes the hague netherlands

installation | machine brut(e) : ten sound-sculpture compositions | adam art gallery | wellington, new zealand | may 2015

composition0001 composition0010 composition0011 composition0100 composition0101 composition0110 composition0111 composition1000 composition1001 composition1010 sound-sculpture series by mo H. zareei | adam art gallery | wellington, new zealand | may 2015 | m-h-z.net

creative applications | fast company | streaming museum | vice | kill screen | neural magazine


Lost Oscillations | interactive 8xch sound field | 2015 | with dugal mckinnon + jim murphy

installation | audacious festival of sonic arts | christchurch, new zealand | oct 2015

AUDACIOUS Festival of Sonic Arts Christchurch, NZ October 2015

aotearoa digital arts


θr | light and sound sculpture | 2015 | technical earth

installation | lux festival | wellington waterfront | wellington, new zealand | aug 2015

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radio new zealand


NOISE SQUARE | generative light and sound sculpture | 2015

installation | international symposium on electronic art | vancouver art gallery | vancouver, canada | aug 2015

audiovisual installation at the International Symposium on Electronic Art 2015 :: Vancouver Art Gallery :: Vancouver :: mo H zareei :: www.m-h-z.net
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Gradient | light and sound sculpture | 2015

installation | low noise vol. 2 | toi pōneke art centre | wellington, new zealand | feb 2015

sounz


Rasping Music | sound and light sculpture | 2014

Winner of Sonic Arts Award 2015 / Sound Art category

winner of sonic arts award 2015


complex | light and sound sculpture | 2014

installation | international conference on auditory display | nyu magnet | new york, united states | jun 2014

complex is a metaphorical recycling of New York City's noisy soundscape, through mapping of the noise levels of four symbolic locations in Manhattan––that are derived from Citygram dataset––onto four mechatronic soundsculptures. The work was featured in the artistic program of the International Conference on Auditory Display 2014, in New York. www.m-h-z.net
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