Norway-based musician Camille Norment is a lot more than “just” a musician. She works with sound, yes, including the glass harmonica and electronics she’ll use in her performance at the Transformer Station sponsored by the Cleveland Museum of Art.
But as a multimedia artist exploring ideas about the body feels or senses or is sensed, she’s about so much more. Her art, she says at her website, “engages the viewer as a physical and psychological participant through architectural, optical illusory, sonic, interactive environments and objects, and drawings that are ‘enlivened’ by the presence of the viewer.”
According to her website, “Norment’s current trajectory of work includes live performance as a mode of exploring the formal and cultural consonances and dissonances in music, freely collapsing given genre and aesthetic spectrums.”
Tickets are $20; seating is very limited so it’s essential to reserve in advance.
www.clevelandart.org/camille-norment-concert
