In November 2025, Fridman Gallery in New York hosted the project’s premiere, presenting its three core elements: a series of large-scale visual works created from recycled vinyl material, a full-scale audiovisual installation, and a one-time live performance featuring international collaborators.
Visitors entered an environment where traces of Fryderyk Chopin’s music were dissolved, reconfigured, and translated into new forms of sound, light, image, and movement.
The Painting Exhibition
The exhibition featured five large visual works, each created with a unique technique using thread-like shavings cut from vinyl records through the lathe-cut process. This discarded material—twisted, uneven, and unpredictable—was transformed into precise, deliberate compositions where organic irregularity met structural order.
Each piece responded to a different facet of Chopin’s music: residual harmonic patterns, faint rhythmic outlines, simmering dynamic tensions, or delicate melodic shadows. The works existed both as independent objects and as visual reverberations of the sonic material present in the installation.
| MS-CRN-EO25N12-1 | Étude Op 25 No 12 |
| MS-CRN-BO57-1 | Berceuse Op 57 |
| MS-CRN-PO28N20-1 | Prelude Op 28 No 20 |
| MS-CRN-PO28N4-1 | Prelude Op 28 No 4 |
| MS-CRN-PO28N2-1 | Prelude Op 28 No 2 |
| MS-CRN-NO28N1-1 | Nocturne Op 71 No 1 |
| MS-CRN-PO28N9-1 | Prelude Op 28 No 9 |
| MS-CRN-PO28N15-1 | Prelude Op 28 No 15 |
The Audiovisual Installation
At the heart of the exhibition stood the audiovisual installation, built on the interplay between light, moving image, and spatial sound. For every musical piece, a dedicated video was recorded directly from the light and object-based installation, resulting in five distinct visual worlds—each one shaped by the behaviour of light across sculpture and space.
Visitors were immersed in a nine-channel sound environment, with each speaker acting as an independent voice within a larger sonic architecture. This created a complex, shifting mosaic of textures, pulses, and micro-details. Combined with the projected imagery, the installation became an enveloping environment that not only reinterpreted Chopin’s music but also expanded it into physical space—into motion, illumination, and dispersed energy.
The Opening Performance
The opening night featured a one-off live performance presented within the exhibition space itself. Surrounded by the paintings and moving images, artists involved in the Chopin Residue album—including Lee Ranaldo, John Stanier, and Zoh Amba—performed new versions of selected pieces.
The concert included reinterpretations of Preludes No. 2, 15, and 20, arranged in hybrid forms: ambient, droning, and partially improvised. The performance briefly “activated” the entire installation, merging live sound with the surrounding visual architecture and creating a singular, site-specific encounter between music, space, and audience.
The Chopin Residue Concept
Chopin Residue is a multidisciplinary project that explores the physical and conceptual boundaries of sound through a carefully controlled process of mechanical deconstruction. The project begins with the reinterpretation of selected compositions by Fryderyk Chopin, which are transformed into experimental audio pieces emphasizing texture, fragmentation, and abstraction. These reinterpretations serve as the source material for the next stage: manual lathe cutting onto vinyl records.Using an analog lathe cutting technique, 81 vinyl discs were individually cut in real time. This process involves engraving grooves directly onto blank discs with a heated stylus, a slow and precise operation that allows no post-production editing. As the lathe engraves the sound grooves, it produces thin, spiral vinyl shavings — physical waste that is typically discarded. In this project, however, these shavings are collected and preserved as an essential part of the work.
Rather than being mere byproducts, the vinyl shavings are transformed into large-scale visual compositions. Mounted onto panels measuring two meters by two meters, these works materialize the sonic process itself, offering a tangible record of sound’s physical transformation. Through this approach, sound is not only heard but also seen and touched, shifting from an auditory experience to a multisensory encounter.
Simultaneously, the cutting process was documented in a durational performance lasting over two days. The documentation captures the meticulous labor and mechanical rhythm involved in cutting each record, emphasizing the relationship between human gesture and machine precision. This video material becomes part of the final presentation, adding an additional layer of meaning and context.
The culmination of the project is an intermedia installation that integrates the sculptural panels, video documentation, and a complex sound environment. Within the exhibition space, multiple turntables play the cut records, while a multichannel sound system delivers a layered composition built from the reinterpreted Chopin pieces. Light and laser projections animate the sculptural elements and surrounding architecture, creating a dynamic environment where sound, image, and object interact.Crucially, the music exists not only within the installation but also as a double album release, which is an integral part of the entire work. The album is divided into two complementary parts: Deconstructions and Reworks. Deconstructions feature new arrangements of Chopin’s pieces by participating artists, who add layers and textures to create fresh interpretations. Reworks go a step further — inspired by these transformed sounds, artists compose entirely new pieces that extend the project’s creative exploration. Across both parts, the piano — a central element of Chopin’s music — has been deliberately removed. By setting aside the original instrument and its associated virtuosity, the focus shifts to what remains: tonal fragments, harmonic residue, and the emotional tension embedded beneath the surface.
The two discs - Deconstructions and Reworks - are designed to function not only sequentially but also simultaneously: listeners are invited to play both parts of the album at the same time — on two turntables or devices — to create evolving, layered soundscapes that mirror the spatial and temporal complexity of the installation. This open-ended format reflects the project's modular and durational nature.
The musical approach bridges experimental guitar, electronic music, and jazz, reflecting the diverse backgrounds of contributors such as Adrian Utley (Portishead), Lee Ranaldo (Sonic Youth), David Pajo (Slint, Papa M), Joey Waronker (Atoms For Peace, Beck), Gail Ann Dorsey (David Bowie), John McEntire (Tortoise), John Stanier (Battles), Jim O’Rourke, alongside new-generation musicians like Masayoshi Fujita and Zoh Amba.
The visual design of the album also forms part of the broader artwork. Photographic documentation of the large-scale vinyl shavings panels is integrated into the physical editions, reinforcing the connection between sound and materiality, and allowing the tactile, sculptural dimension of the project to echo through the experience of listening. Through this multilayered process, Chopin Residue challenges conventional understandings of music and heritage. Destruction — whether of physical media or classical forms — is not an end, but a creative act that opens space for transformation, memory, and new meanings. The project invites us to rethink Chopin’s legacy not as a fixed canon but as living material, capable of continual reinvention.
With its precise technical execution and careful integration of media, Chopin Residue reframes the act of destruction not as an end but as a catalyst for new forms of artistic expression, challenging traditional notions of music, heritage, and materiality.