Monumental Movement Podcast
This episode explores Survival Research Laboratories as pioneers of mechanical art—an experimental collective that transformed machines into instruments of spectacle, sound, and confrontation. Founded by Mark Pauline in the late 1970s, SRL developed large-scale performances where robotics, industrial materials, and controlled destruction converge. We trace their emergence within the experimental art scenes of San Francisco, where technology, performance, and countercultural expression intersected. Their events feature custom-built machines—flamethrowers, robotic arms, and mechanized structures—operating in choreographed sequences that blur the line between engineering and art. Technologically, SRL’s work redefines machinery as expressive medium. Sound is generated not only through electronic systems, but through impact, friction, and mechanical motion—creating dense, physical soundscapes that emphasize scale and intensity. Historically, their practice reflects a broader critique of industrial society, exploring themes of control, autonomy, and the human relationship to machines. Performance becomes both spectacle and inquiry—where risk, noise, and structure coexist. This episode analyzes mechanical art as sonic and conceptual architecture—where machines perform, sound emerges from motion, and art confronts the limits of technology. Through history, engineering, and aesthetics, we explore how SRL expanded the possibilities of performance and sound. 【Related Column】Survival Research Laboratories (SRL): Pioneer of mechanical art https://monumental-movement.jp/en/Column-Survival-Research-Laboratories/
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