A Time of Waiting: The Observatory Project, A Series of Not-Measuring Event
4 April 2025 - 23 May 2025

Image: The Observatory Project, ASAP (Installation View), 2025, Courtesy of the artists.
Saturdays
2 - 4pm
Auckland University of Technology
Forecourt, WM Building
40 St Paul Street
At 7am on a clear autumn morning, The Observatory Project’s site office arrived. With surprising efficiency, a truck backed into a narrow courtyard entrance and elevated the 6 × 2m container into the air, gently guiding it to its destination at the shared entrance of the Gallery and the School of Art and Design. At odds with its stately setting, numerous onlookers queried; ‘What’s going on?’
Over the course of the exhibition this small structure will operate as a kind of ‘bootleg’ radio station. In it the observatory houses
a complex array of equipment, including their Adaptable Sound Interferometry Equipment (A SINE), and a series of modular sound-generating sculptures housed within large steel cabinets. The site office also serves as a ‘plinth’ for an aluminium substructure which forms the station’s aerial, based on Bolton-Stanley’s interferometer (1948). Through this rudimentary and explicitly sculptural means, the observatory can broadcast across analogue AM frequencies, and while restricted to the immediate vicinity of the exhibition, can sometimes override more established commercial and public radio platforms operating on the same frequencies. Their radio programming will include texts read by local radio presenters, interviews, recordings, and experiments with ‘not-measuring’ events, a methodology that the pair have developed over several years which deliberately blurs the lines between scientific and artistic models of observing and collating data.
The building is branded ‘ASAP’, announcing an on-demand model atypical of the strict schedule-focused culture of radio. In this sense, they provoke thought about how responsive and experimental radio could be if untethered from its rigid durational methodology. The installation’s distinctly provisional quality also enables it to shift and morph according to the observatory’s activities, which includes sea-cliff interferometry, ‘not-measuring’, provisional making in observatories, and documentation of machine calibrations.
Formed in 2017 after encountering gravitational wave sonifications, The Observatory Project is a collaborative project led by Auckland-based artist Ziggy Lever and musician and artist Eamon Edmundson-Wells, which explores making in relation to scientific processes. Their projects operate at the intersection of art and science, by using sound, video, custom made electronics, and sculptural installation as a means to diagram, interpret, and imagine scientific processes of observation. Their projects, while often occupying galleries, have popped up in specialist labs around the globe, including the Acoustics Research Lab, Auckland; Bidston Observatory Artistic Research Centre (BOARC), UK; and the Large Hadron Collider at CERN, Switzerland.