Speed Reading by Sonya Lacey
Research Presentation
 

Slowly warping over time, the material components entailed in the production and circulation of the written word, Speed Reading alters the boundaries of legibility and shakes the physical foundations of the transmission of knowledge.

Speed Reading by Sonya Lacey

28 October 2017 - 11 March 2018

Confounding ordinary notions of legibility, the work of Sonya Lacey addresses the politics of communication by tampering with the concrete textures of language. Specifically conceived for The Vitrine, Speed Reading combines two bodies of work that put the sheer physicality of language to a test. Headlines from The Straits Times and Solar Print Tests (both 2017) result from a series of experiments, undertaken by the artist during her residency at NTU CCA Singapore, where she exposed newsprint paper to both sunlight and artificial light, while Dilutions, an earlier work from 2016, is a sculptural piece involving a movable metal typeface and the process of corrosion determined by lead oxide. Slowly warping over time, the material components entailed in the production and circulation of the written word, Speed Reading alters the boundaries of legibility and shakes the physical foundations of the transmission of knowledge.


Speed Reading by Sonya Lacey, October 28, 2017 – March 11, 2018, Courtesy NTU CCA Singapore.
Speed Reading by Sonya Lacey, October 28, 2017 – March 11, 2018, Courtesy NTU CCA Singapore.
Speed Reading by Sonya Lacey, October 28, 2017 – March 11, 2018, Courtesy NTU CCA Singapore.
Speed Reading by Sonya Lacey, October 28, 2017 – March 11, 2018, Courtesy NTU CCA Singapore.
Speed Reading by Sonya Lacey, October 28, 2017 – March 11, 2018, Courtesy NTU CCA Singapore.

Contributors
Sonya Lacey
Sonya Lacey
Artist-in-Residence
New Zealand

Sonya Lacey (b. 1976, New Zealand) is a Wellington-based artist whose practice focuses on forms of communications within spoken, printed, and online scenarios. She works with a variety of mediums including performance, video, and installation often drawing on historical references to speculate on the specificity of socio-technological discourses. Alongside her studio practice, Lacey is also interested in curatorial, publishing, and collaborative methodologies. Together with Sarah Rose, she established the collaborative research project lightreading.

Her works have been shown at Govett Brewster Art Gallery, New Plymouth, Taranaki, New Zealand (2017, 2016), Glasgow Centre for Contemporary Art, United Kingdom (2016), and London International Film Festival, United Kingdom (2015).