Work samples
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Mente Mineral (Mineral Mind)
(2023)
7 x 10 ½ x 3 ¾ in
Wild clay, beeswax
Mente Mineral (Mineral Mind) is a more-than-human music mask that is an homage to the mountain range of Chubut, Argentina, which once formed part of the Gondwana supercontinent. The wild clays used to make this piece, which date back to the Miocene (13 million year old material) and the Paleocene periods (66 Million year old material) were responsibly harvested and used to sculpt this piece in situ over the course of 4 days during a residency organized by Nómada Cerámica.
The instrument produces sound with internal bells and two small flutes that have two finger holes each. The flutes can be played separately or together to produce melodies and beat frequencies.
Video footage taken by Julieta Bilbao of Nómada Cerámica
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Heron Horn
(2023)
10 ½ x 4 x 8 in
Earthenware, oxides, pigments, beeswax
Video features a short composition I played, recorded, and produced with sounds from the instrument, which is a hand-built horn inspired by Great Blue Heron. This sculptural instrument can be played in different ways to produce sounds ranging from percussive to bird calls to deep digeridoo-like drones.
The shape, design, and coloring of the instrument is inspired by the morphology of Great Blue Heron, who has been an important bird throughout my life story.
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Palingenesis
Palingenesis is a composition for hand-built triple flute, tree branches, field recordings, and electronics. The piece is a contemplation on the circular nature of time, both in relation to natural cycles, and the processes of inner healing.
Composed using a hand-crafted ceramic triple flute, which features three different tubular flutes with intuitive microtonal tunings, the composition ebbs and flows along a patient, purposeful journey into the depths of the flute’s unique sonic material, stretching it to its limits and finally disintegrating it completely with digital processing like sampling and granular synthesis before ultimately reaching a quiet corner of focused integration.
Mixing and mastering by Ricardo Wheelock
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Brain Corral Triple Flute
(2023)
4 ¼ x 15 x 1 in
Earthenware, oxides, pigments
Video features a short composition I played, recorded, and produced with sounds from the instrument shown in the image, which is a hand-built triple flute. This instrument is composed of three different tubular flutes with microtonal intuitive tuning, which can be played independently or together to create multiphonic melodies and beat frequencies.
The instrument is inspired by ancient multiple flutes of Central and South America, and the design recalls the intricate, puzzle-like surface of Brain Coral, who I encountered at the National Aquarium shortly after relocating to Baltimore.
About Melissa Hyatt
I am an interdisciplinary artist who co-creates with an ever-growing collection of sculptural musical instruments, including flutes, horns, trumpets, noise generators, bells, rattles, and whistling bottles, that I hand-craft with clay.
My work can take different forms: zoomorphic instruments with intuitive, microtonal tunings, improvisational performances, electroacoustic compositions, and educational workshops and residencies for all ages. These different expressive channels allow… more
Original Instruments: Double Flute on display at the Baltimore Museum of Art
In December of 2023 one of my original instruments was installed at the Baltimore Museum of Art, in the new Wall of Wonder; an interactive educational installation in the Patricia and Mark Joseph Education Center.
The Wall of Wonder features digital displays of artworks and artists, discovery drawers with samples of artists’ materials and artworks to touch, and other interactive elements.
My double flute with snake motif sits in a discovery drawer with the theme “Play with Clay” and can be experienced through sight, touch and sound. As part of the display there is a button that can be pushed to play an audio of a short composition I created with the instrument.
I'm excited for this instrument to be part of this initiative, which speaks to museums exploring new ways of engaging visitors of all ages, and involving other ways of perceiving and understanding art.
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Yellow Double Flute
Double flute featuring an original design with snake motif, and intuitive tuning. This instrument is composed of two different tubular flutes which can be played independently or together to create multiphonic melodies and beat frequencies.
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Double Flute in the Wall of Wonder at the BMA
Double flute installed in a discovery drawer of the Wall of Wonder
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Wall of Wonder in the Patricia and Mark Joseph Education Center of the BMA
The Wall of Wonder features digital displays of artworks and artists, discovery drawers with samples of artists’ materials and artworks to touch, and other interactive elements.
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Double flute installed in a discovery drawer of the Wall of Wonder
My double flute with snake motif sits in a discovery drawer with the theme “Play with Clay” and can be experienced through sight, touch and sound; there’s a button to push that triggers an audio of a short composition I created with the instrument.
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Short composition with Double Flute
Short composition I recorded, edited and produced with the Double Flute in Ableton Live.
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Recording with the Double Flute
I did recordings with the flute in Ableton Live and then arranged and edited the audio to create a short composition of about 2 minutes.
Commissions: Historical Recreations for the Walters Art Museum
From 2021-2024 I received three commissions to recreate historical musical instruments that are being stewarded in the Walters Art Museum's Art of the Americas collection.
As an instrument-maker, I received my training in a master's program at the National University of Argentina, where we learned to build musical instruments through recreating historic instruments like ocarinas, multiple flutes and whistling bottles, among others. This formation, in addition to my experience as a soloist with the Orchestra of Indigenous Instruments and New Technologies, where I performed with many different kinds of ancient instruments, has given me a profound understanding of the acoustic systems, construction, and techniques of playing many little-known ceramic instruments.
I began working with curatorial and conservation staff at the Walters Art Museum in 2019, to research ceramic whistles and flutes of the ancient Americas. The Walters has a number of ancient ocarinas, flutes, and other aerophone instruments from different parts of the Prehispanic Americas in their collection, however, in an art museum they were understood largely on the basis of their visual qualities.
Working replicas allow for much more complex research into the sonic qualities of these objects without extensive handling or alteration of delicate artifacts; some of which date back over 1,000 years. Using in depth visual analysis, detailed measurements, and x-radiography, these historic recreations are built and sculpted to be as identical to the original instruments as possible, both in function, form, and iconography. These replicas will allow the museum to present works to the general public in a way that does not only show their visual qualities, but will be able to present the original artifacts as the authentic, creative sound-making, multipurpose objects that they were in antiquity. In this way, the museum will offer a more accurate view of the participatory, communal rituals of the past.
These historical recreations will be utilized in exhibition, demonstrations, and educational programming in connection with the permanent installation of the Art of the Americas exhibition, which is scheduled to open in 2025.
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Historical recreation in process
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Historical Recreation of a Whistling Bottle from the Sicán-Lambayeque culture of ancient Peru
This video features a short composition I played, recorded, and produced with the instrument shown in the image, which is an historic recreation of a Whistling Bottle from the Sicán/Lambayeque culture of Peru.
Whistling bottles are sophisticated sound artifacts composed of systems of hollow vessels, tubes and whistles. These complex instruments were made for about 3,000 years by many different cultures across Peru, Ecuador, Colombia and as far North as Mexico.
This whistling bottle has two pelicans, each with a small whistle embedded in the stirrup near its back. The whistles can be activated either by blowing into or across the spout of the instrument, or through movement of water in its interior.
The original object is stewarded by the Walters Art Museum and forms part of their Art of the Americas collection.
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Historical recreation in process
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Historical recreation in process
Image shows a detail of the whistles embedded in the back of each pelican.
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Image of finished historical recreation before firing
Image shows the historical recreation finished with traditional techniques: painting with colored engobes and burnishing.
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Historical recreation of a Sicán-Lambayeque Whistling Bottle
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Historical recreation of a Sicán-Lambayeque Whistling Bottle
Musical Composition: Whewan
Composition for synth, found natural instruments, handcrafted horn and flutes, and voice. For this piece I played original instruments: Heron Horn and Ancestor's Double Flute, as well as an historic recreation of a rare type of flute from the Pre-Columbian culture Jama-Coaque (of present-day Ecuador). The piece was recorded, composed and produced using Ableton Live.
“Whewan” is an Orkney (Scotland) word for wind that howls around corners; the imagery and mood of this word feel perfect for this piece.
Whewan, Self-published (2023)
Read more about the Jama-Coaque here
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Whewan
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Ancestors Double Flute
Ancestor's Flute (2023)
12 x 3 3/4 x 1 in
Earthenware, oxides, pigments
Original instrument composed of two tubular flutes; one with pentatonic tuning and the other which acts as a drone producing a single note when played. The flutes have separate air channels which allow them to be playing individually or together.
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Historical Recreation of a Jama-Coaque Flute
Historical recreation of a Jama Coaque flute (2021)
7 1/2 x 2 1/2 x 2 in
Earthenware, oxides
I was instructed in the creation of this ancient flute by one of my teachers, Estéban Valdivia, who received presidential permission to study instruments in the archives of all of Ecuador's museums. Being able to analyze broken historic artifacts, as well as completing x-ray scans of intact instruments, allowed Valdivia to study the inner workings of this complex flute in detail to understand the construction of the two internal whistles hidden within the abdomen of the flute.
Because of the particular construction of the acoustic system, this flute has a very particular, airy timbre.
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Heron Horn
Heron Horn (2023)
10 ½ x 4 x 8 in
Earthenware, oxides, pigments, beeswax
Hand-built horn inspired by Great Blue Heron. This sculptural instrument can be played in different ways to produce sounds ranging from percussive to bird calls to deep digeridoo-like drones.
The shape, design, and coloring of the instrument is inspired by the morphology of Great Blue Heron, who has been an important bird throughout my life story.
Performer: Soloist with the Orchestra of Indigenous Instruments and New Technologies of Argentina
From 2012 - 2019 I performed as a soloist with the Orquesta de Instrumentos Autóctonos y Nuevas Tecnologías of Argentina (OIANT). This visionary, artistic-academic project was created by Argentine composer and educator, Alejandro Iglesias Rossi, and is directed by Iglesias Rossi and Visual Arts Director, Susana Ferreres.
The OIANT is a living museum, with an ever-growing collection of thousands of Indigenous instruments that have been collected with contemporary artisans across the Americas and built by Orchestra members. These instruments become part of re-orchestrations of historic folk songs like Agüita de Putiña, and compositions of contemporary Latin American composers like Iglesias Rossi, Leo Brouwer, and Eduardo Cáceres, and have been taken to stages across South America, Europe, Asia and Africa.
During my time with the Orchestra I was a multi-instrumentalist, playing a large range of instruments including: Ocarina, Tarka, Siku, Pututu, Bastón, Zumbador, Vasija Silbadora, Silbato de la Muerte, N'viké, Turú, Pinkullo, Teponaztli, Huéhuetl, Sonajero, and Rama. We played in important concert halls of Buenos Aires, Argentina, including the Teatro Colón and the Ballena Azul of the Centro Cultural Kirchner, and toured across the country as well as in France, Puerto Rico and Cuba.
As part of my experience with the Orchestra, I was involved in instrument-building, costume construction, set design and construction, choreography and re-orchestration of contemporary works with Indigenous instruments.
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Performance in Buenos Aires
Image from performance at the Centro Cultural Kirchner in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
I am playing a bamboo Siku, or panflute, collected by the Orchestra with a Peruvian instrument-maker.
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Excerpt from performance in Córdoba, Argentina
Excerpt from "Antara" a composition by Chilean composer Carlos Zamora, during a performance at the Regional Conference of Higher Education of Latin America and the Caribbean (CRES 2018) in Córdoba, Argentina.
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Performance of Entonces en la Escala de la Tierra
Performance of "Entonces en la Escala de la Tierra", a composition by Susana Ferreres for sculptural ocarinas, whistling bottles, double flute, and noise generators.
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Performance at the Centro Cultural Kirchner
Image from a performance at the Centro Cultural Kirchner in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
I am playing a Lakota hand drum made by Sonja Holy Eagle. This instrument was collected by my adopted Uncle Mark Van Norman, of the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe, who gifted it to the Orchestra in 2017.
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Performance at the Centro Cultural Kirchner
Image from performance at the Centro Cultural Kirchner in Buenos Aires, Argentina, where the OIANT performed together with the Orquesta Sinfónica Juvenil Nacional San Martín (National San Martín Symphonic Youth Orchestra)
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Performance in Havana, Cuba
Image from a performance at the Leo Brouwer Festival de Música de Cámara in Havana, Cuba.
I am playing instruments called "bastones" that were made by members of the Orchestra.
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Performance at the Teatro Colón
Image from performance at the Teatro Colón in Buenos Aires.
Musicians are playing Teponaztli and Huéhuetls, which are hand-carved traditional drums that were used by the Aztec and other cultures of ancient Mexico. These percussion instruments were collected by the Orchestra with a contemporary Mexican drum-maker.
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Performance at the Teatro Colón
Image from a concert at the Teatro Colón in Buenos Aires.
I am playing instruments called "bastones", which were made by members of the Orchestra.
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Susana Ferreres, Visual and Scenic Arts Director
Image from a concert at the Teatro Colón in Buenos Aires, of Susana Ferreres, the Visual and Scenic Arts Director of the Orchestra of Indigenous Instruments and New Technologies.
Ferreres is wearing a sculptural Armadillo headdress, which she designed and fabricated herself.
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Alejandro Iglesias Rossi, Creator and Director of the OIANT
Alejandro Iglesias Rossi on stage playing three Huéhuetls, which are traditional carved wooden drums that were used by the Aztec and other cultures in Mexico. These instruments were collected by the Orchestra with a contemporary Mexican drum-maker.
Original Instruments: The Place-Based Creation of Mente Mineral (Mineral Mind)
From January 19-29th, 2023 I participated in an intensive 10-day training in research, study, and creation with clay as living material, that took place in the Patagonian province of Chubut, Argentina organized by Nómada Cerámica. This opportunity for professional development was made possible thanks to a grant from the Maryland State Arts Council.
During the residency we responsibly harvested local clay from the local mountain range, which once formed part of the Gondwana supercontinent. We worked with two materials; one dating to the Miocene (13 million year old material) and the other dating to the Paleocene period (66 Million year old material).
We completed a process of testing with the clays, and proceeded to develop and prepare a clay body as a group, to use in the fabrication of our own individual creations. We completed the residency by building a temporary outdoor kiln and completing a 6 hour wood-firing before closing the residency with an improvisational performance in the mountains.
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Mente Mineral (Mineral Mind)
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Mountains in Chubut, Argentina
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First encounter with local clay in situ
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Gathering inspiration in form and texture from the local landscape
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Communal preparation of the clay body
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Mente Mineral (Mineral Mind) in process
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Mente Mineral (Mineral Mind) in process
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Mente Mineral (Mineral Mind) heading into the outdoor kiln for firing
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Mente Mineral (Mineral Mind) emerges from the fires
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Applying beeswax as a finishing technique
Musical Composition: Hanblecheyapi (In Search of a Vision)
Composition for voice, electronics, and traditional, hand-built instruments: Ocarina, wooden Rattles, Whistling Bottle.
This piece was composed as part of my thesis in the master's program in Musical Creation, New Technologies, and Traditional Arts at the National University of Argentina Tres de Febrero. In 2018 it was recipient of First Prize in the Contemporary Music Category from the Argentine National Music Council's Tribune of Composers, and was one of the International Rostrum of Composer's 12 recommended works for the year.
Hanblecheyapi is an electroacoustic work composed with instruments of the three Americas (North, Central, South) that I constructed during the Master's program and within the framework of projects with the Orchestra of Indigenous Instruments and New Technologies. The title of the work alludes to the profoundly transformative process that one undergoes during the creative process.
Original Instruments: Shell Bells
These shell bells were created using bits of shells gathered at Calvert Cliffs in Maryland. Each of the three bells produces a different note based on the size of its bell; the smaller the bell the higher the note and vice versa.
Shell Bells (2023)
Earthenware, oxides, pigments, beeswax
Original Instruments: Ancestor's Flute
The design for this instrument originated in my thoughts about creativity and lineage; I like to think that where we find ease with certain materials and techniques, we are tapping into something that comes through us, not from us. In that way, our art connects us with those that came before us. When I use my hands and natural materials to make musical instruments, and find an intuitive relationship with clay or wood, form or design, I think about how this connects me with my Father, a woodworker; my Mother, a painter; my paternal Grandfather, a machinist and jewelry maker; my great Aunt, a sculptor.
This instrument is composed of two tubular flutes; one with pentatonic tuning and the other which acts as a drone producing a single note when played. The flutes have separate air channels which allow them to be playing individually or together.
Ancestor's Flute (2023)
12 x 3 3/4 x 1 1/4 in
Earthenware, oxides, pigments
Commissions: Bespoke Instrument series for music label and non-profit, Shika Shika
In 2021 I was commissioned by Shika Shika, a music label and non-profit organization, to create an original instrument series as part of the fundraising efforts for their album "A Guide to the Birdsong of Western Africa".
Shika Shika seeks to create an inclusive, global movement that empowers artists, celebrates cultural migrations and embraces the power of music and art to drive change. Since their founding in 2015, the label has released music from over 60 artists from 30 countries, including 36 digital and 10 vinyl releases. Its iconic non-profit projects, such as the A Guide to the Birdsong series and the multi-label compilation Mamazonia: Odes to the Forest have gained worldwide recognition as innovative examples of musical activism.
The A Guide to the Birdsong project was born from a simple but beautiful idea – to challenge some of the most talented producers and musicians from one region of the world to create a track inspired by the song of an endangered bird from their country. The tracks would be compiled to make an album, released digitally and on eco-vinyl, with 100% of the funds raised from sales used to support local organisations working to save these incredible bird species.
I was commissioned to design and build a series of flutes inspired by one of the birds to be featured on the album, and chose the Rufous Fishing Owl of Ghana. These flutes were offered as one of the rewards during the project's Kickstarter crowd-funding campaign, which raised over $26,000 that was directly donated to three different non-profits working in important conservation efforts in Western Africa.
Listen to A Guide to the Birdsong of Western Africa
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Owl Flute
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Owl Flute plaster mold
Since I was going to be producing a series of 12 flutes, I decided to build a prototype and use it to create a plaster press mold to facilitate the process.
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Owl Flute in progress
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A parliament of flutes!
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Owl Flute in progress
Each flute was finished using traditional techniques: hand-painting using colored engobes, and burnishing with lapidary stones to seal the surface of the clay body and bring out a natural shine to the finished piece.