{"id":9189,"date":"2026-03-27T11:41:57","date_gmt":"2026-03-27T09:41:57","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/kim.lv\/?p=9189"},"modified":"2026-03-27T12:07:26","modified_gmt":"2026-03-27T10:07:26","slug":"group-exhibition-rtru-at-kaje-nyc","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/kim.lv\/en\/group-exhibition-rtru-at-kaje-nyc\/","title":{"rendered":"Group exhibition RTRU* at KAJE (NYC)"},"content":{"rendered":"<b>RTRU*<\/b><\/p>\n<p><b>*<i>Raudive Technoculture Research Unit<\/i><\/b><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><b>Ka Baird, Scott Benzel, Valdis Celms, Cal Fish, Jason Isolini, Voldem\u0101rs Matvejs, <\/b><b>Karl\u012bna Me\u017eecka, Adriana Rami\u010d, Konstant\u012bns Raudive, Ieva Rubeze<\/b><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><b>Venue\/Organized by:<\/b> KAJE, 74 15th St., Brooklyn, NY 11215, NYC<\/p>\n<p><b>RTRU<\/b>: Zane Onckule, Elizaveta Shneyderman<\/p>\n<p><b>Opening: <\/b>April 4, 6-9 pm<\/p>\n<p><b>Exhibition dates:<\/b> April 5 &#8211; May 17<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>\u201c<i>Mammu, n\u0101c \u0101tr\u0101k<\/i>.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>(\u201cMother, come quickly.\u201d)<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>RTRU presents <i>RTRU* (Raudive Technoculture Research Unit)<\/i>, a group exhibition at KAJE that gathers around the figure of Konstantin Raudive (1909\u20131974), a Latvian writer, translator, philosopher, and parapsychological researcher known for his investigations into Electronic Voice Phenomena (EVP), the capture of disembodied voices onto magnetic tape. The exhibition title extends the name of the curatorial collective itself\u2014RTRU (Riga Technoculture Research Unit), originally referencing the Cybernetic Culture Research Unit (CCRU) and the Baltic&#8217;s oldest technical university, Riga Technical University (RTU, est. 1862)\u2014by substituting \u201cRiga\u201d with \u201cRaudive,\u201d aligning the exhibition\u2019s subject with the collective\u2019s own research framework.<\/p>\n<p>In the psychic aftermath of postwar Europe, Raudive\u2014formerly a student of Carl Jung\u2014pioneered experimental recording techniques to collect what he believed were messages from the dead. Using radio static, blank tape, and improvised recording configurations, he claimed to document thousands of brief, compressed utterances: voices that appeared multilingual, fragmented, and resistant to stable interpretation. These recordings were assembled in his book <i>Breakthrough<\/i> (1971), where he catalogued and analyzed them through a method combining empirical observation with metaphysical conviction.<\/p>\n<p>A polyglot, Raudive recorded voices compressed or hybridized across Latvian, German, Spanish, English, Italian, Swedish, Russian, and French, producing a fractured auditory field in which sounds hover between noise and recognition. He reported that many voices seemed to belong to those closest to him\u2014most often his mother, who affectionately called him \u201cKostja\u201d\u2014yet the archive also features unsettling echoes of Churchill, Hitler, Stalin, and Mussolini, bringing intimate recollection into proximity with figures from twentieth-century history.<\/p>\n<p>He proposed that the ability to discern voices in tape hiss was unevenly distributed, appearing predominantly among physicians, priests, military personnel, and teachers, framing listening itself as a trained and culturally conditioned practice. Statements\u2014ranging from the mundane (\u201cHeat the bathroom. Company is coming\u201d \/ <i>Bad heizen\u2026 Besuch kommt<\/i>) to the obscure (\u201cYou belong probably to the cucumbers\u201d \/ <i>Du geh\u00f6rst wahrscheinlich zu den Gurken<\/i>)\u2014and the first phrase Raudive believed he could clearly decipher\u2014\u201cthat is right,\u201d transcribed \u201c<i>pa-reizi-t\u0101-b\u016bs\u201d<\/i>\u2014were later said to have been present on earlier recordings all along, hinting at an archive whose meanings emerge retroactively through repeated listening, complicating the distinction between external transmission and internal perception.<\/p>\n<p>The reception of Raudive\u2019s work varies across cultural contexts. In Latvia, his legacy unfolds in two registers: an extensive literary catalogue of essays and translations, and the memory of a serious\u2014if eccentric\u2014intellectual whose investigations resonate with broader philosophical and spiritual traditions, a stance he occasionally framed through the concept of <i>gara <\/i><i>aristokr\u0101ts<\/i>, the \u201caristocrat of spirit.\u201d In the United States, Raudive\u2019s recordings circulate primarily within paranormal subcultures\u2014ghost hunters, speculative researchers, and late-night radio audiences.<\/p>\n<p>Beyond these niches, the tapes circulate across cultural registers: hiss and buried voices appear in Christian metal as alleged satanic residues; The Smiths sample their spectral atmospherics; David Lynch explores related fascinations with disembodied transmission; William S. Burroughs\u2019 tape cut-ups fragment and recombine recordings to reveal latent meaning; Mike Kelley adapts E.V .P. to his audio practice, valuing its blend of sonic effects, myth-making, interpretation, and spiritualist history and dubbing Raudive the \u201cNew King of Pop\u201d. Labels such as Sub Rosa frame Raudive within experimental, industrial, and archival sound culture, where tape operates simultaneously as evidence, artifact, and aesthetic object moving between occult inquiry, avant-garde practice, and contemporary music.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><strong>RTRU*<\/strong> engages Raudive archive as material to be re-examined rather than resolved. Egg-carton acoustic structures shape the exhibition\u2019s architecture, recalling improvised recording studios. Within this environment, the project leaves open whether Raudive should be understood as the inventor of a new perceptual apparatus or as a subject overtaken by auditory hallucination. If trauma marks a rupture in symbolic continuity, the recording apparatus appears as a prosthetic attempt to capture and stabilize what returns in distorted form. The exhibition, therefore, unfolds less as a linear narrative than as an exploded diagram in which voices, devices, testimonies, artworks, and documents are set into relation without being fully resolved. In this context, Raudive\u2019s tape recorder operates both as an instrument and a reference point, producing fragments of speech whose speakers remain uncertain.<\/p>\n<p>The works assembled in <i>RTRU*<\/i> span existing contemporary artworks, repurposed archival inserts, and new audio-tinted commissions by a cross-generational constellation of artists, living and deceased. Signals arrive fragmented, meanings remain provisional, and listening emerges as a deliberate and speculative labor rather than passive reception. Within such a field, messages rarely stay where they began: voices drift, contexts fracture, and what once circulated as metaphysical evidence reappears, without ceremony, inside the formal registers of sound art, archival playback, or even dance music. The persistent question is whether any residue of the original charge survives such migrations, or whether meaning, like tape hiss, simply conforms to the systems that reproduce it.<\/p>\n<p>This question finds its echo in the inscription on Raudive\u2019s own tombstone: \u201c<i>N\u0101ves nav, ir <\/i><i>tikai p\u0101rtap\u0161ana<\/i>.\u201d (\u201cThere is no death, only transformation.\u201d). If that is the case, Raudive\u2019s archive suggests a simple operational principle: signals do not disappear; they merely change formats. The question then becomes what continues to speak once the channel has been switched.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><b>ABOUT RTRU<\/b><\/p>\n<p>Established as the Riga Technoculture Research Unit in 2022 under the commission of Kim? Contemporary Art Centre in Riga<b>,<\/b> RTRU is a curatorial collective (Zane Onckule and Elizaveta Shneyderman) that develops exhibitions as open-ended systems of inquiry. Its projects bring together artworks and non-art objects within structured yet indeterminate frameworks, often organized around figures, concepts, or problematics that resist stable interpretation.<\/p>\n<p>RTRU\u2019s research engages the expanding field of technoculture and the circulation of technical images in contemporary art, approaching media not as autonomous innovations but as phenomena that emerge from, and feed back into, cultural conditions. Across its exhibitions, RTRU emphasizes juxtaposition, misalignment, and the redistribution of meaning across objects, contexts, and viewers. Rather than presenting a unified thesis, each project constructs a set of conditions through which multiple, and often conflicting, readings can emerge.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><b>Additional curatorial support:<\/b> State Culture Capital Foundation of Latvia<\/p>\n<p><b>Curatorial assistant:<\/b> Katr\u012bna Jau\u0123iete<\/p>\n<p><b>Acknowledgements: <\/b>Raudive Cultural Heritage Center, National Library of Latvia, Anna Vojevodska, Anna D\u0101ve, artists.","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>RTRU* *Raudive Technoculture Research Unit &nbsp; Ka Baird, Scott Benzel, Valdis Celms, Cal Fish, Jason Isolini, Voldem\u0101rs Matvejs, Karl\u012bna Me\u017eecka, Adriana Rami\u010d, Konstant\u012bns Raudive, Ieva Rubeze &nbsp; Venue\/Organized by: KAJE, 74 15th St., Brooklyn, NY 11215, NYC RTRU: Zane Onckule, Elizaveta Shneyderman Opening: April 4, 6-9 pm Exhibition dates: April 5 &#8211; May 17 &nbsp; [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":9213,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"inline_featured_image":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[5,4,24,38],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-9189","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-kim-events","category-kim-exhibitions","category-featured-homepage","category-news"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v21.9 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>Group exhibition RTRU* at KAJE (NYC) - Kim? 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