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[Nettime-nl] [Sonic Acts] Sonic Light 2003 programme
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Title: [Sonic Acts] Sonic Light 2003
programme
Sonic acts presents:
Sonic Light
2003 composed light,
articulated space
films:
Illuminating Music - Dan
Sandin, Bill Etra, Vasulka's, etc.
Meditation for the Masses
- Steven Beck, Eric Siegel, Skip Sweeney
Absolute Classics -
Oskar Fischinger, Len Lye, etc.
Motion Graphics - John &
James Whitney
Text of Light - Stan
Brakhage
Turn, Turn, Turn - Jud
Yalkut
Luminodynamisme - Nicolas
Schöffer
Through the Looking Glass
- Jim Davis, Stan Brakhage
Light - Jordan
Belson
The Time Travellers - Ib
Melchior, Oskar Fischinger
The Right Stuff - Philip
Kaufmann, Jordan Belson
Groupe de Recherche Images
- Pierre Schaeffer
conference:
Fred Collopy - The
Contributions of Painters to the Development of Visual Music
Earl Reiback - My Work in Lumia
Eleonore de
Lavandeyra-Schöffer - Luminodynamism in the work of Nicolas
Schöffer
Cees Ronda - New
Technologies for Illumination
Seth Riskin - Light Dance
Paul Friedlander - 3-D
Light Forms
Robert Haller - The Films
of Jordan Belson (film programme)
Frans Evers - A Dancer had
a Dance: Synesthesia and the Unity of the Arts
Sylvie Dallet - Groupe de Recherche Images
Larry Cuba - Form =
Movement
Bart Vegter - A Vast Space
with a Narrow Entrance
Chris Casady - Instant Visual Music around the
World
Peter Luining - The
Emergence of the Sound Engine
Pascal Rousseau - Light
Experiments in the Beginnings of Abstraction. An Archaeology
of Peter Stasny - Light Art at the Bauhaus, the
'Farbenlichtspiele' of Ludwig Hirschfeld-Mack
Michael Scroggins -
Absolute Animation Through Improvisation
Benton Bainbridge - Try
This at Home: Analog Video Synthesis
Fred Collopy - An Instrument for Performing Real-Time Abstract
Animations
Golan Levin - Interface
Metaphors for Audiovisual Performance Systems
Performances
by:
@c, Maryanne Amacher, Scott
Arford, Benton-C Bainbridge, Olivia Block, COH, Sue Costabile,
Fred Collopy, Richard Devine, Effekt, Dino Felipe, Hazard,
Hecker, Edwin van der Heide, Arnold Hoogerwerf, Naut Humon,
KidGoesting, Laminar, Golan Levin, Lia, Francisco Lopez, Lucia di
Monocordi, Peter Luining, Christian Marclay, Peter Max, Ikue Mori,
Numb, Robert Pravda, pxp, random k, Joost Rekveld, reMI, Seth Riskin,
Don Ritter, Otto von Schirach, Sutekh, tcw23, Telco Systems, Yasunao
Tone, Venetian Snares
Sonic Light
2003
composed light, articulated
space
Paradiso and de balie, 13th to 23rd February 2003
The ninth edition of the Sonic
Acts festival will be held in Paradiso and De Balie under the name
Sonic Light 2003. The festival will comprise a week of film
presentations, a three-day conference, a small exhibition and three
evenings of live music and light projections in a space specially
designed for this purpose - the 'Sonic Light Box'. The central
theme of the festival is the fascination held by artists for the
creative possibilities offered by giving musical form to light and
space.
The vision of a 'music for the eye' is centuries old and forms an
important undercurrent in the recent history of art and the new media:
from the construction of the first colour organs, light sculptures and
the first use of coloured lighting in theatre, through abstract film
animation and synthetic video images, to the design of interactive
software to generate light and sound. The idea of a musical light art
to be presented in an environment specially designed for that purpose
becomes topical every time a new visual medium appears on the
horizon.
Among the present generation of computer artists a new type of visual
music is being created which can be performed live or made specially
for the Internet.
These 'light environments' would
be inconceivable without some form of immersive sound. For centuries
composers have dreamt of being able to compose and articulate a truly
spatial kind of music. With the arrival of electronic sound
reproduction this dream received new impetus from technology, which
has led to the stereophonic and surround systems which can now be
found in most living rooms. In electronic music it has become possible
to minutely compose the spatial aspects of sound by working with
quadraphonic, hexaphonic (Boulez), octophonic (Stockhausen) and
dodecaphonic (Humon) loudspeaker arrangements. Recent initiatives,
like Naut Humon's Recombinant Media Labs, encourage the new
generation of sound artists and electronic music producers to further
investigate the huge potential offered by a new spatial form of
music.
Film programme
OpFilm No. 11: Sonic Light 2003
The OpFilm programme centres on three themes: the early
experiments with electronic images for 'experimental television', the
work of a number of filmmakers central to abstract filmmaking over the
past fifty years, and the relationship between film and kinetic
art.
The programme will also include two science-fiction films with special
effects by two abstract filmmakers: Oskar Fischinger and Jordan
Belson. The programme includes several unique screenings of films that
are very rarely shown, especially the programmes on the work of Jordan
Belson, Nicolas Schöffer and Pierre Schaeffer.
Four video works will be shown continuously during the festival
projected on the facade of De Balie from dusk to midnight as part of
De Balie's ongoing 'Straal' project.
Thur.13, 20.00h
Illuminating Music - Dan Sandin, Bill Etra, Vasulka's, etc.
Fri.14, 20.00h
Meditation for the Masses - Steven Beck, Eric Siegel, Skip
Sweeney
Sat.15, 20.00h
Absolute Classics - Oskar Fischinger, Len Lye, etc.
Sun.16, 20.00h
Motion Graphics - John & James Whitney
Mon.17, 20.00h
Text of Light - Stan Brakhage
Tue.18, 20.00h
Turn, Turn, Turn - Jud Yalkut
Wed.19, 20.00h
Luminodynamisme - Nicolas Schöffer
Thur.20, 20.00h
Through the Looking Glass - Jim Davis, Stan Brakhage
Fri.21, 20.00h
Light - Jordan Belson
Fri.21, 21.30h
The Time Travellers - Ib Melchior, Oskar Fischinger
Sat.22, 20.00h
The Right Stuff - Philip Kaufmann, Jordan Belson
Sun.23, 20.00h
Groupe de Recherche Images
- Pierre Schaeffer
Fri.14 - Wed.26, dusk
'Straal' - Bainbridge, Casady, Lia, Scroggins
Thu.13, 20.00h
Illuminating Music
Dan Sandin, Bill Etra, Vasulka's, and others
'Direct Videosynthesis' involves making images by directly
generating the electronic signal fed to a television tube. This
kind of work was one of the first forms of video-art and
provided a springboard for later celebrities such as Steina and
Woody Vasulka, Gary Hill and Nam June Paik. To produce these
images special video-synthesizers were built, often by the
artists themselves, as in the case of Steven Beck, Bill Etra and
Dan Sandin. These machines were installed in experimental
television studios where research was being done into new forms
of television. This programme focuses on those artists who considered
video-synthesis to be the future of the medium, often as a means of
producing images in real-time, not unlike a musician working in a
recording studio.
Spiral 5 PTL (with documentary)
Dan Sandin, 1982, 15', video.
Conception
Steven Beck, 1972, 6', video.
Illuminated Music III
Steven Beck, 1973, 15', video.
Abstractions on a Bedsheet
Bill Etra, 1975 , 6', video.
Telc
Steina and Woody Vasulka, 1974, 5', video.
Noisefields
Steina and Woody Vasulka, 1974, 12', video.
Before the Flood
Matthew Schlanger, 1985, 5', video.
Aquarelles
Dean Winkler, Tom Dewitt, Vibeke Sorensen , 1981, 8', video.
Power Spot
Michael Scroggins, 1986, 9', video.
Fri.14, 20.00h
Meditation for the Masses
Steven Beck, Eric Siegel, Skip Sweeney
This programme focuses on the more psychedelic aspects of
synthetic video. A recurrent theme here is the idea of 'feedback'.
Video-feedback - recording the image from a monitor and feeding it
back in - was one of the fundamental techniques used for
producing synthetic images, and this principle was often
compared to the feedback between artist and audience. Skip Sweeney
explains that he 'plays' video-feedback just as a guitarist plays
sound feedback, and that he detests 'hot shit video artist
rhetoric'. Eric Siegel puts it this way: "It is the
instrument of the New Television; the growing tendency of more
artistic abstract television performed by beautiful enchanting
people.
Where conventional television
seeks to inform and entertain, the New Television will be engaged in
expanding people's consciousness and providing a way for constructive
meditation".
Methods
Steven Beck, 1971, 11', video.
Einstine
Eric Siegel, 1968, 5:41 , video.
Illuminatin' Sweeney
Skip Sweeney, 1975, 29', video.
Tomorrow Never Knows
Eric Siegel, 1968, 3:10 , video.
Symphony of the Planets
Eric Siegel, 1968, 10:20 , video.
Union
Steven Beck, 1975, 9', video.
Are you Experienced?
Steven Beck, 1982, 7', video.
Voodoo Child
Steven Beck, 1982, 7', video.
Sat.15, 20.00h
Absolute Classics
Oskar Fischinger, Len Lye and others.
When film was still a new medium many artists speculated about
what would be the ultimate new film art. In 'absolute film', a term
coined in the twenties, the combination of light and movement was seen
as the essence of film. This programme includes a number of
classic works from that early period, such as 'Opus 1' - the
oldest preserved abstract film - as well as 'Allegretto'
and 'Colour Box', films that should be part of everyone's
culture. Attention will be devoted to the relationship between this
movement and movements in other art forms, such as the Bauhaus
(Moholy-Nagy, Richter, Lee), American Secessionist Photography
(Strand, Steiner), the work of musical theoretician Joseph
Schillinger (Bute) and with the beginnings of kinetic art (Lye,
Vavra).
Opus I
Walter Ruttmann, 1920, 4', 35mm.
Manhatta
Paul Strand, Charles Sheeler, 1921, 9', 16mm.
Filmstudie
Hans Richter, 1926, 5', 16mm.
R1
Oskar Fischinger, 1927, 7', 16mm.
H20
Ralph Steiner, 1929, 14', 16mm.
Svetlo Proniká Tmou
Otakar Vavra & Frantisek Pilat, 1930, 7', 35mm.
Lichtspiel Schwarz-Weiss-Grau
Laszlo Moholy-Nagy, 1930, 6', 16mm.
Studie nr.8
Oskar Fischinger, 1932, 5', 16mm.
Rhythm in Light
Mary Ellen Bute, 1934, 5', 16mm.
Colour Box
Len Lye, 1935, 4', 16mm.
Allegretto
Oskar Fischinger, 1936, 3 min.
Swinging the Lambeth Walk
Len Lye, 1939, 4', 16mm.
1941
Francis Lee, 1941, 6', 16mm.
Colour Sequence
Dwinell Grant, 1943, 3', 16mm.
Sun.16, 20.00h
Motion Graphics
John & James Whitney
Inspired by the work of Oskar Fischinger the two brothers John and
James Whitney plunged themselves into making abstract films. John had
a background in music composition, James was a painter and these
worlds complemented each other wonderfully when they were making
their 'Abstract Film Exercises' in the forties. For these films
they built special devices that enabled them to animate purely
synthetic images and sounds. In their later work they went their
own ways: James made a few films based on Buddhist and
alchemical symbolism in which he combined direct treatment of
the film material with highly complex point animations. John
developed several animation techniques and was the first artist
invited by IBM to develop computer animation. Based on
Pythagorean ideas about harmonic ratios, he developed a coherent
concept for how to generate visual patterns and sounds using the
computer.
Film exercises 1-5
John & James Whitney, 1943-1944, 21', 16mm.
Celery Stalks at Midnight,
John Whitney, 1951-1953, 3', 16mm.
Yantra,
James Whitney, 1950-1957, 8', 16mm.
Lapis,
James Whitney, 1963-1966, 10', 16mm.
Experiments in Motion Graphics,
John Whitney, 1968, 13', 16mm.
Osaka 1.2.3,
John Whitney, 1970, 3', 16mm.
Arabesque,
John Whitney, 1975, 8', 16mm.
Mon.17, 20.00h
Text of Light
Stan Brakhage
'All that is, is light', is the quote from Johannes Scotus Erigena,
an Irish monk from the ninth century, which starts the film that
Brakhage considers to be one of the most important in the whole
of his prolific output. The film initially began as a portrait
of a millionaire and evolved into a meticulous study of the worlds
hidden in his crystal ashtray. In the delicate reflections and
refractions of light, Brakhage found analogies for processes
taking place everywhere, it opened up a way of seeing for him
that does not try to appropriate whatever enters the field of vision.
For Brakhage this film shows how everything comes out of light
taking shape: the things around us, our visual impressions and
our thoughts. He dedicated the film to Jim Davis, the man who was the
first to show Brakhage the 'spark of refracted light', and it
premiered a week before Davis died.
The Text of Light
Stan Brakhage, 1974, 75', 16mm.
Tue.18, 20.00h
Turn, Turn, Turn
Jud Yalkut
Jud Yalkut was the man with the camera in New York in the sixties,
when kinetic sculpture and projections were gradually emerging
from the underground into the official art world. From 1965 he
was for a few years part of the American collective USCO, a
group of artists and technicians that gave performances and
built environments. In this period Yalkut made a number of
abstract films in which the kinetic machines and projections of
USCO figure as visual material. Other films he made are more
documentary and show the context in which USCO navigated. He
also made films with The Grateful Dead playing live, with the first
exhibitions of lightsculptures by Julio Le Parc and Nicolas
Schöffer, with early multi-media performances by Aldo
Tambellini, Jackie Cassen, Rudy Stern, Timothy Leary, and in
collaboration with Nam June Paik.
Turn, Turn, Turn
Jud Yalkut, 1965-66, 10', 16mm.
Diffraction Film
Jud Yalkut, 1965, 10', 16mm.
Le Parc
Jud Yalkut, 1966, 4', 16mm.
Moondial Film
Jud Yalkut, 1966, 4', 16mm.
China Cat Sunflower
Jud Yalkut, 1973, 4', 16mm.
Us
Jud Yalkut, 1966-2000, 16', 16mm.
Us Down By The Riverside
Jud Yalkut, 1966, 3', 16mm.
D.M.T.
Jud Yalkut, 1966, 3', 16mm.
Electronic Fables
Jud Yalkut, Nam June Paik, 1971, 9', 16mm.
Beatles Electroniques
Jud Yalkut, Nam June Paik, 1966-69, 3', 16mm.
Electronic Moon No. 2
Jud Yalkut, Nam June Paik, 1969, 4', 16mm.
Wed.19, 20.00h
Luminodynamisme
Nicolas Schöffer
Nicolas Schöffer was a pioneer of kinetic art and was the first
artist to make interactive sculptures. He himself termed his
moving art 'cybernetic art' because, for him, the essence of the
work was not the mere fact of movement, but the composition of
that movement, the program controlling it. He was a visionary
artist with far-reaching ideas about the future function of art
in society and he was disgusted by the bourgeois world of
galleries and the art market. Schöffer designed many projects
for interactive sculptures and for light environments in public
spaces, a handful of which have indeed been realized.
In cooperation with several starting film directors he made a number
of films based on the shadows and projections of his sculptures. He
also made the first experimental video work ever to be broadcast on
television, provoking violent reactions from the French audience. The
programme consists of films from the personal archive of Schöffer
and will be introduced by his widow, Eleonore de
Lavandeyra-Schöffer.
The programme will include at least the following films:
Fer Chaud
Jacques Brissot, 1957, 4', 16mm.
Spatiodynamisme
Tinto Brass, 1958, 6', 16mm.
Mayola
Henri Gruel, 1958, 3', 16mm.
Variations Luminodynamiques 1
Jean Kerchbron, 1961, 15', 16mm.
Le Propre de l'Homme (excerpt)
Claude Lelouch, 1962, approx. 5', 35mm scope.
Thur.20, 20.00h
Through the Looking Glass
Jim Davis, Stan Brakhage
Jim Davis was originally a painter who became more and more
interested in working with moving images. He held that in the
twentieth century it was no longer possible to make meaningful
art using traditional forms such as painting and sculpture.
Around 1945 he gave 'light concerts' for friends, showing light
reflected and refracted by coloured plastic shapes, and he
concluded that these complex and organic projections would live
better on film. He made many abstract films until his death in
1974, works he made 'to stimulate interest in hitherto
unperceived aspects of the physical universe, in hitherto
unrecognized potentialities in the human imagination'.
This programme will be introduced by Robert Haller of Anthology Film
Archives in New York.
Writ in Water
Jim Davis, 1955, 8', 16mm.
Becoming
Jim Davis, 1955, 9', 16mm.
Comingled Containers
Stan Brakhage, 1997, 5', 16mm.
Jersey Fall
Jim Davis, 1949-54, 8', 16mm.
Through the Looking Glass
Jim Davis, 1953, 8', 16mm.
Night Music
Stan Brakhage, 1986, 30 sec, 16mm.
Energies
Jim Davis, 1957, 10', 16mm.
Impulses
Jim Davis, 1959, 9', 16mm.
Birds of Paradise
Stan Brakhage, 1999, 3',
16mm.
Death and Transfiguration
Jim Davis, 1961, 10', 16mm.
Fri.21, 20.00h
Light
Jordan Belson
Jordan Belson made films consisting of nebulous, amorphous, and
incredibly rich imagery that touches on the narrative while
remaining strictly non-verbal. The images conjure up
associations with interstellar or microscopic processes and were
considered by Belson as visualizations of his inner states.
"A film like Samadhi, for example, is intended to be a real
documentary representation, as accurately as it was possible to
make, of a real place and a real visual phenomenon that I
perceived - just as I'm looking at you right now. Even on a
superficial level everyone is willing to grant the existence of
what they call phosphenes. OK, now go deeper than those
superficial things and allow that there are even deeper levels
where visual communication still exists. A new language has to
be developed which acknowledges and can speak from that
awareness. And I think my kind of work has sort of opened up the
means for doing that, a way of doing it which the storytelling
film has
neglected. They're just telling
the same old thing over and over again, not really trying to
break into more expanded areas of awareness or understanding. "
(Belson, 1975)
This programme will be introduced by Robert Haller of Anthology Film
Archives in New York.
Allures
Jordan Belson, 1961, 9', 16mm.
Re-Entry
Jordan Belson, 1964, 6', 16mm.
Phenomena
Jordan Belson, 1965, 6', 16mm.
Samadhi
Jordan Belson, 1967, 6', 16mm.
World
Jordan Belson, 1970, 7', 16mm.
Light
Jordan Belson, 1973, 8', 16mm.
Fri.21, 21.30h
The Time Travellers
Ib Melchior, Oskar Fischinger
'You are in the future before it happens!' A B-movie filled with
gimmicks, one of which is a future 'love machine'. In a sensual
environment we see a young woman stroking coloured squares with her
fingertips, in this way creating an enchanting play of light and
sound. Behind the scenes the images for this machine were produced
using a special version of Fischinger's 'Lumigraph'. He invented
this blissfully simple device in the fifties to be able to play
light in
real-time.
The Time Travellers
Ib Melchior, 1964, 82', 16mm.
Sat.22, 20.00h
The Right Stuff
Philip Kaufmann, Jordan Belson
A classic film about the early years of space travel, with 'special
visual creations' by Jordan Belson. In the cloud-like effects and
abstract play with fiery sparks we can clearly recognize the hand of
the master.
The Right Stuff
Philip Kaufmann, 1983, 193', 35mm.
Sun.23, 20.00h
Groupe de Recherche Images
Pierre Schaeffer
Pierre Schaeffer is famous for being the founder of the 'Musique
Concrète' movement and is now regarded by many to be one of the
precursors in thinking about the concept of 'sampling'. Besides being
a composer and theorist, he was also the head of the 'Groupe de
Recherche Images' of the French broadcasting corporation, a
department doing research into future forms of television and
where about 1000 experimental films were made. Most of these
films were never shown on television and are now locked away in
a state archive (as if dangerous to mankind). The films shown in this
programme come from the personal collection of Pierre Schaeffer. They
comprise two beautiful cinematic essays on the relationship between
image and sound, two very different works produced by the GRI and
finally, 'La Trièdre Fertile', a film version, based on
oscilloscope images, of the sounds in Schaeffer's tape
composition with the same name.
The programme will be introduced by Sylvie Dallet, director of the
'Centre d'Études et de Recherche Pierre Schaeffer' in Paris.
Essais Visuels sur les Objets Sonores
Pierre Schaeffer, 1966, 19', 16mm.
Etude aux Allures
Raymond Hains, Jacques Villeglé 1950-54, 5', 16mm.
Narcissus Echo
Peter Foldes ,1972, 6', 16mm.
Dialogue du Son et de l'Image,
(various artists), 1966, 19', 16mm.
La Trièdre Fertile
Pierre Schaeffer, 1975, 38', 16mm.
Fri.14 - Wed.26, dusk
'Straal'
Bainbridge, Casady, Lia, Scroggins
A programme consisting of four works by artists who will attend
Sonic Light. These works will be projected in a loop, every evening
from dusk to midnight on the side facade of De Balie, on a
screen overlooking the Leidseplein, the centre of nightlife in
Amsterdam.
Here, shimmering . . . gone
Benton-C Bainbridge, 2000/2003, 5', video
Filling Station
Chris Casady, 2001, 3', flash-animation
e.v.a. - G.N.S.I.L
Lia, 2003, 4', video
Study No. 6
Michael Scroggins, 1983, 6', video
Sonic Light 2003 Conference
The conference part of Sonic Light will take place on 21st, 22nd
and 23rd February in De Balie. The subject of the Sonic Acts
conference last year was 'The Art of Programming', this year it
is to be 'Composing Light, Articulating Space'. The conference
gives a broad overview of the art of 'composed light': the
shaping in time of light and colour in a way which is comparable
to the way sound is given form in music. A large part of the
conference will consist of presentations by artists who will
explain something of the background to their work, the
techniques they use or may have devised and will include
presentations of fragments of their work. Another part of the
conference will comprise more theoretical and historical
presentations which place present-day developments in a broader
context.
To bring some order to the web of ideas and influences linking the
various contributions, the conference has been loosely structured
around three themes, coinciding with the three days. The first day
will centre on the links between light art, the visual arts and
architecture. The second day will be about strategies for making image
and sound compositions, focusing on computer animations in film
and for the web. The last day will deal with various approaches to
perform light and abstract images in real-time.
During the three days of the conference there will be a modest
exhibition in De Balie, consisting of two works. An amazing
'3d-lumia' box by Earl Reiback will be shown, a machine which
produces refined optically 'real' images that appear to float in
the space before it. There will also be a presentation on dvd of
the reconstruction of Ludwig Hirschfeld-Mack's
'Farbenlichtspiele', made in 2000 by a Viennese team of
performers headed by Corinne Schweizer and Peter Böhm.
Fri 21, 13:00h
Fred Collopy - The Contributions of Painters to the Development
of Visual Music
Earl Reiback - My Work in Lumia
Eleonore de Lavandeyra-Schöffer - Luminodynamism in the work
of Nicolas Schöffer
Fri 21, 16:00h
Cees Ronda - New Technologies for Illumination
Seth Riskin - Light Dance
Paul Friedlander - 3-D Light Forms
Fri 21, 20:00h
Robert Haller - The Films of Jordan Belson (film programme)
Sat 22, 13:00h
Frans Evers - A Dancer had a Dance: Synesthesia and the Unity
of the Arts
Sylvie Dallet - Groupe de Recherche Images
Larry Cuba - Form = Movement
Sat 22, 16:00h
Bart Vegter - A Vast Space with a Narrow Entrance
Chris Casady - Instant Visual Music around the World
Peter Luining - The Emergence of the Sound Engine
Sun 22, 13:00h
Pascal Rousseau - Light Experiments in the Beginnings of
Abstraction. An Archaeology of Participative Art
Peter Stasny - Light Art at the Bauhaus, the
'Farbenlichtspiele' of Ludwig Hirschfeld-Mack
Michael Scroggins - Absolute Animation Through
Improvisation
Sun 22, 16:00h
Benton Bainbridge - Try This at Home: Analog Video
Synthesis
Fred Collopy - An Instrument for Performing Real-Time Abstract
Animations
Golan Levin - Interface Metaphors for Audiovisual Performance
Systems
Fri 21, 13:00h
Fred Collopy - The Contributions of Painters to the Development of
Visual Music
In this talk Collopy will describe some of the early contributions
of abstract painters to the development of an art of light, as
well as some of their theories about the relationship of
painting to music. The artists considered will include Leopold
Survage, Morgan Russell, Stanton Macdonald Wright, Paul Klee,
Gyorgy Kepes, Piet Mondrian, and Laszlo Moholy-Nagy.
Fred Collopy was a former visiting scientist at IBM's Thomas J.
Watson Research Center and teaches technology and design at Case
Western Reserve University's Weatherhead School. His web site
at rhythmiclight.com details the history and theoretical
foundations of visual music.
Earl Reiback - My Work in Lumia
Reiback will present his 'lumia' work and explain his methods and
techniques.
After an initial career as a nuclear physicist, Earl Reiback turned
to kinetic light art through an effort to improve the
environment in which he was living. His light boxes were quickly
picked up by the contemporary art scene and were termed 'lumia'
after the work of Thomas Wilfred who independently had been
doing similar things and became a close friend. Outside the art
world he did large-scale projects for light environments in
restaurants, for interior design, as backdrops for fashion shows
and for the Electric Circus, the first discotheque in
history.
Eleonore de Lavandeyra-Schöffer - Luminodynamism in the work of
Nicolas Schöffer
Nicolas Schöffer had an amazing output of visionary ideas about
art and the future of mankind. He started as a painter but
understood around 1948 that in our present society it was no
longer possible to create valid art using the traditional
'beaux-arts' media. He turned to making art using the immaterial
substances of space, light and time, which led him to formulate
Spatiodynamism, Luminodynamism and Chronodynamism, respectively.
He made many moving, interactive and programmed sculptures,
experimental cybernetic shows, films, projects for urban
planning and published a number of books.
Eleonore de Lavandeyra-Schöffer abandoned her own career as an
ethnomusicologist and Indian music teacher to take care of her
husband and his work when he became partly paralysed in the last
years of his life. After his death she has continued to preserve
and promote his work.
Fri 21, 16:00h
Cees Ronda - New Technologies for Illumination
Cees Ronda will give an introduction on the physics underlying -
familiar light sources and on the relationship between how light is
generated and the way colours can be reproduced. In the second part
of the talk he will discuss new developments in illumination
from a technical research and development perspective. He will
elucidate the basic physical processes and interactions leading
to the emission of light in the new light sources, which differ
quite extensively from the light sources and illumination
systems used nowadays. Ronda will also discuss recent
developments in LED technology, in colour variable light and
give a survey of future technologies.
Cees Ronda is professor 'Materials Science' at the Ornstein
Laboratoryof Utrecht University and works for the Philips Research
Laboratories in Aachen as research fellow.
Seth Riskin - Light Dance
Riskin's work involves physical movement with the additional
element of light instruments attached to his body, carefully
aimed and adjusted to produce space-defining effects. The silent
performances, known as Light Dance, surround viewers with fluid
architectures of light. The talk will set the Light Dance art
form within a broad historical context of human expression
through the medium of light. Emphasis will be placed on the
conjunction of the body with light -- the light-body -as a
highly charged, trans-cultural image that is key to an
"anthropology" of light.
A former U.S. national champion gymnast, Seth Riskin originated Light
Dance at the M.I.T. Center for Advanced Visual Studies. He has been
performing internationally and has been conductingresearch that
led him to India to study Hindu ritual fire dances. Currently Seth is
a Research Fellow at the M.I.T. Center for Advanced Visual
Studies and Director of the M.I.T. Light Symposium 2003, a forum
on new light technologies, emerging visual culture and the role
of art.
Paul Friedlander - 3-D Light Forms
Friedlander will describe how he first became interested in
kinetic art and began to develop an interest in light sculpture.
He will talk about his previous career in stage lighting
and his subsequent quest to create a means of 3-D projection,
and how this led to the invention of Chromastrobic Light. He
will recount the discovery of the gyrating forms that blend
harmony and chaos which are so characteristic of his work. He
will then show how these lightforms developed from a desk- top sized
novelty to light sculptures on a monumental scale.
Paul Friedlander was raised in Cambridge on a diet of relativity and
cosmology, and was an aspiring rocket scientist and interstellar
propulsion expert. He metamorphosed to become a stage lighting
designer, computer artist and light sculptor. His sculptures
have been shown widely all around the globe. He was also
an award winner at 'Lightforms '98' in New York.
Fri 21, 20:00h
Robert Haller - The Films of Jordan Belson (film programme)
Like Oskar Fischinger, Jordan Belson approached film with one foot in
Eastern religion and one in modern science. His works fall into
several phases: the 1940's, the period 1950-62, and a third
phase that began in 1964 with 'Re-entry'. Robert Haller will
introduce a programme which includes the following films by
Belson: Allures (1961), Re-Entry (1964), Phenomena (1965),
Samadhi (1967), World (1970) and Light (1973).
Robert Haller has been in charge
of the collections and film preservation of Anthology Film
Archives in New York. Among other things, he has been involved
in the preservation of the works of Jim Davis, published several texts
by Jim Davis, Stan Brakhage and the catalogues of events he has
curated: 'First Light' in 1998 and 'Galaxy' in 2001.
Sat 22, 13:00h
Frans Evers - A Dancer had a Dance: Synesthesia and the Unity of
the Arts
Evers will talk about his work in experimental research, ranging
from perceptual psycho-physics to the study of synesthetic
concepts in experimental art. He will discuss his collaborative
work with Larry Marks in a cross-modal research programme, which
showed strong perceptual interactions between auditory pitch and
loudness with visual brightness and sharpness of visual form.
Besides this, he will discuss some of the art projects based on
the study of historical synesthetic models by Castel (1725),
Scheuer (1798), Wagner (1850), Kandinsky (1911),
Schönberg(1910), and Mondrian(1922), etc.
Frans Evers has been head of the Interfaculty Image and Sound of the
Royal Conservatoire and the Royal Academy of Art in The Hague
since 1989, and was one of the founders of the Sonic Acts
festival in 1994. Prior to and alongside to his work as an
innovator in art education, he studied synesthesia at the
University of Amsterdam and, further to receiving a Fulbright
Award, was able to continue his research at Yale University.
Sylvie Dallet - Pierre Schaeffer and the Groupe de Recherche
Images
Pierre Schaeffer is mostly known for his pioneering work as a
composer and theorist of 'Musique Concrète'. Much less known
is the fact that he was also a profound thinker about mass
media, multimedia and about the relationship between image and
sound. For a number of years he was not only the head of the
'Groupe de Recherches Musicales' but also of the 'Groupe de
Recherche Images' and other research groups devoted to
technology and literature. These were experimenting with two
innovative approaches: the transition from the classical Arts to
the recording Arts , and the critical practice of the
'observer/observed'.
Sylvie Dallet is a philosopher and historian. She was chosen by
Schaeffer to initiate reflection on his work and to preserve his
archives and consequently, since 1995, she has been the director of
the 'Centre d'Etudes et de Recherche Pierre Schaeffer'. She was
appointed professor at the University of Marne la Vallée to start a
research and study programme devoted to contemporary art in
relation to new technologies, which began in 2002. She has also
regularly published essays on cinema and political history.
Larry Cuba - Form = Movement
In the pure form of abstraction that Cuba pursues, visual
perception is paramount. But because the images are generated
via algorithms written in computer language, there is a paradox
in trying to use words to describe images for which words do not
exist. He will present and discuss his work on film 'Two Space',
'3/78' and 'Calculated Movements' and will reveal his current
projects.
Larry Cuba is widely recognized as a pioneer in the use of computers
in animation art. Producing his first computer animation in
1974, Cuba was at the forefront of the computer-animation
artists considered the "second generation" - those who
directly followed the visionaries of the sixties: John Whitney
Sr., Stan Vanderbeek and Lillian Schwartz. He is the founder of
the iotaCenter in Los Angeles, an organization dedicated to
preserving and promoting the art of light and
movement.
Sat 22, 16:00h
Bart Vegter - A Vast Space with a Narrow Entrance
Bart Vegter has developed his own algorithms and his own software
to make his most recent abstract films. In this presentation he
will talk about the obstacles and discoveries when using computers to
make moving images and he will explain something about the making of
two of his recent computer films: 'NACHT-LICHT' and
'FOREST-VIEWS'. Sketches, image tests and fragments of these
films will be shown, 'FOREST-VIEWS' will be shown in its
entirety.
Bart Vegter has a background in physics and electronics. He started
to make films after coming into contact with the Free Academy
Psychopolis in The Hague and many of the people involved, such
as Frans Zwartjes, Peter Rubin, Paul de Mol and Jacques Verbeek.
Since 1981 he has made seven abstract films using a variety of
techniques.
Chris Casady - Instant Visual Music around the World
Chris Casady is animating with Macromedia Flash aiming to
re-invigorate the field of abstract animations begun by the
early non-objective painters of the 20th century. Many of them
were interested in film and made various attempts to animate
their visions with technology of the time; tedious hand
animation. Today, the ability to easily place moving coloured
images and sound in front of eyeballs around the world
instantly, is an opportunity too compelling to ignore. We owe it to
those who did it the hard way, to do it the easy way. Chris will
share his experiments.
Chris Casady is a 'traditional' effects animator with an early
training in visual music at Cal-Arts in Los Angeles. Working
from his studio in Hollywood he has earned two Clio awards for
his work in commercials and directed an animated music video for
the Beastie Boys. His film credits include the first three Star
Wars films, TRON, Beetlejuice, Airplane! and Tank Girl. His
animated film "Pencil Dance" won awards at animation
festivals in France, Italy, Japan and Canada and he was a five-time
speaker at the FlashForward International conference.
Peter Luining - The Emergence of the Sound Engine
From the early beginnings of the Internet Peter Luining was
interested in combining images and sounds interactively, and in his
talk he will describe how his work evolved in relation to the
development of computers and the Internet. With computers
turning into multimedia machines and the Internet becoming
faster, a new type of audiovisual work emerged: the sound
engine. This is a small piece of software which allows the user
to interact with images that are linked to sounds, thus making
sound-image compositions possible. Luining will present his own
sound engines, discuss some of the ideas behind them and show how they
have evolved to fit different contexts.
After his contemporary philosophy study, Peter Luining became active
in the Amsterdam vj-scene, made 3d-animations and videoclips. In 1995
the character of his work changed dramatically when he discovered the
net and Luining first won international recognition with his work
"Clickclub", at the Transmediale festival in Berlin. Since
1997 Luinings' work has turned towards a kind of minimalism,
while continuing his earlier research on the dynamics of the
net.
Sun 23, 13:00h
Pascal Rousseau - Light Experiments in the Beginnings of
Abstraction.
An Archaeology of Participative Art
Rousseau will give an analysis of the first experiments with
colour music and light shows in Europe and the United States,
focusing on the idea of collective participation and popular
communion in the new era of the modern age. He will approach
this early history of light art by discussing the mystical and
religious motives of the earliest light artists and the
electrical metaphor of music as a magnetic and electrical fluid.
He will draw parallels between these ideas from the early period
and the avant-garde in the 1920s, the 'happenings' and
environments of the 1960s, and the new emphasis on collectivity in
today's lounge phenomenon.
Pascal Rousseau is professor of contemporary art at the University of
Tours and also works as a curator. He curated the exhibition
"Robert Delaunay. From Impressionism to Abstraction"
in the Centre Georges Pompidou in 1999 and is currently
preparing a large exhibition about "The Origins of
Abstraction" for the Musée d'Orsay in Paris in 2003. He
has published several articles on synesthesia in the first stages of
abstraction.
Peter Stasny - Light Art at the Bauhaus, the 'Farbenlichtspiele'
of Ludwig Hirschfeld-Mack
The 'Farbenlichtspiele' by the Bauhaus student Ludwig
Hirschfeld-Mack resulted from investigations into the
interaction of colour and form as well as from a shadow play by
fellow student Kurt Schwerdtfeger in 1922. Their first public
performance at the Bauhaus in 1923 was the starting point for
Hirschfeld-Mack to become an important pioneer of the moving
coloured image. The further development of the 'Farbenlichtspiele'
towards mechanization ended abruptly in 1940 when Hirschfeld-Mack was
deported to Australia from England, his country of exile. In
this lecture Stasny will outline the history of the
'Farbenlichtspiele' and discuss their origins in the fundamental
aesthetic research conducted at the Bauhaus, which also included
direct and reflected light.
Peter Stasny did his thesis research on the work of Hirschfeld-Mack
and curated the Hirschfeld-Mack exhibitions at the Museum for
Modern Art in Bolzano, the Jüdisches Museum in Vienna and the
Jüdisches Museum in Frankfurt in 2000. He teaches design
science and design history in Linz, St. Pölten and Vienna.
Michael Scroggins - Absolute Animation Through Improvisation
"The approach to creating absolute animation that I have
found to be the most successful draws upon the power inherent in
real-time improvisation. A change made to the image creates a
particular affect, this affect then influences the choice made
in creating the next change, and so on. From my earliest
experiences finger painting in the 1950s, doing liquid light
projection in the 1960s, working with video synthesizers in the
1970s, playing video studio production switchers in the 1980s,
to planning immersive VR performances in the 1990s,
improvisation has been an essential factor in discovering affective
compositional structures."
Michael Scroggins is a pioneer in the field of performance
animation. His absolute animation works have been widely
exhibited internationally. His most recent work investigates the
potential of gesture capture in creating real-time absolute animation
in immersive VR.
Sun 23, 16:00h
Benton Bainbridge - Try This at Home: Analog Video Synthesis
Bainbridge will give a demonstration of his low-tech version of
video synthesis, showing his tools, explaining his backgrounds
and ideas. He will talk about his fascination with the pioneers
of direct video synthesis and show fragments of his installation
work and his work as a VJ.
Benton-C Bainbridge draws upon a youth misspent playing with fire,
food and electronics to compose moving pictures for stage
performance, generative installation and fixed media
dissemination. He was a founding member of several video
performance collectives in New York, such as 77 Hz, The Poool
and NNeng. His collaborations include work with Bill Etra
and David Linton's UnityGain.
Fred Collopy - An Instrument for Performing Real-Time Abstract
Animations
Imager is an instrument that permits painters to play images in
the way that musicians play with sounds. Its design, which
organizes controllers and modulators to manipulate colours,
forms, and motions in real-time, will be discussed.
Fred Collopy designed his first version of Imager for the Apple II
computer in 1977. Since then he has implemented it on several
platforms and his work has been presented at SIGGRAPH, the IEEE
Symposium on Visual Languages, the International Symposium on
Electronic Arts (ISEA), the Academy of Management, and numerous
universities and shows.
Golan Levin - Interface Metaphors for Audiovisual Performance
Systems
This talk presents an overview of interface metaphors for the
real-time and simultaneous performance of dynamic imagery and
sound, with special attention to the metaphor of an
inexhaustible, infinitely variable, time-based, audiovisual
substance which can be gesturally created, deposited,
manipulated and deleted in a free-form, non-diagrammatic image
space. With the goal of realizing instrumental systems through
which the unison of sound and image could be tightly linked,
commensurately malleable, and deeply plastic, a series of examples
which make use of this metaphor will be presented and
discussed.
Golan Levin is an artist,
composer, performer and engineer interested in developing
artifacts and events which explore supple new modes of reactive
expression. His work focuses on the design of systems for the
creation, manipulation and performance of simultaneous image and
sound, as part of a more general inquiry into the formal
language of interactivity, and of non-verbal communications
protocols in cybernetic systems.
Sonic Light Box
The night programme of Sonic Light will take place in Paradiso,
Amsterdam, on February 21st to 23rd.
For this occasion the main auditorium of Paradiso will be transformed
into a 'Sonic Light Box', a space designed by Robin Deirkauf.
Essential to the concept of the 'Sonic Light Box' is the
immersion of audience and particpants in light and sound. This
time the artists responsible for these images and sounds will not be
the centre of attention themselves, but it will be their work that
directly communicates to the audience. In total 41 performers
and collectives producing image and sound will present solo
pieces and collaborative works specially prepared for Sonic
Light.
The small auditorium of Paradiso will be dominated by Paul
Friedlander's kinetic light sculptures 'Wave Equation' and
'Hypersphere'. Students f the Interfaculty Image and Sound from
The Hague will present a daily programme of light and sound
performances here, DJs Christian Vogel (Friday) and KidGoesting
(Saturday) will provide a pleasant setting later in the night.
Other light objects and luminous interventions by the students
of the Interfaculty Image and Sound will find other places in the
building of Paradiso.
In the 'Sonic Light Box' all light performances and projections will
take place on a gigantic light-object, as wide as it is high,
splitting the main Paradiso auditorium in two. This object can
serve as a projection screen but, more importantly, emits light
of continuously changing colour and intensity. It will be the
sole source of light for all events, together with the luminous
and mobile roof hovering above it.
The auditorium will also have no front and no back in terms of
sound, only a centre and periphery. Traditionally, all sound comes
from the direction of the stage, but during Sonic Light a
spatial sound system will be used in which the audience will be
surrounded by six independent loudspeakers on the floor and six
hanging from the ceiling. In this way it will be possible to
compose the spatial experience of both sound and light in the 'Sonic
Light Box'.
As has become customary during the Sonic Acts festival, the programme
at the start of the evening will be aimed more at an audience
interested in the arts and will transform to a more dance-oriented
programme after midnight. The evenings will not be simply a
succession of performances according to a festival schedule, but
will have a modular structure. We have asked the invited artists
to give a number of short performances instead of playing one
long set. For example, an artist may be giving a short
performance of pure sound collage on Friday evening and play a
dance-oriented set on Saturday. The programme of each evening is
designed to provide a maximum of variety and contrast between
successive sets.
We also asked the artists we invited to engage in various
collaborations. We have set these up to promote dialogue between the
different worlds of light art and sound art, and to show a wide
variety of approaches to the relationship between image and sound.
The programme offers a wide range of artists, from renowned
composers such as Amacher to young dogs such as Venetian Snares,
from projections of films by Oskar Fischinger to improvisations
by Golan Levin and Benton Bainbridge.
The exact time schedule of performances can be found two weeks prior
to the festival on www.sonicacts.com. There will also be a
printed schedule as guide for the evenings. Announcements will
be made on special displays in Paradiso.
The Friday evening starts at 23:00h with a programme until
4:00h.
The Saturday programme starts at 20:00h and ends at
4:00h.
The Sunday programme starts at
20:00h and ends at 3:00h.
Presences by:
@c, Maryanne Amacher, Scott
Arford, Benton-C Bainbridge, Olivia Block, COH, Sue Costabile,
Fred Collopy, Richard Devine, Effekt, Dino Felipe, Hazard,
Hecker, Edwin van der Heide, Arnold Hoogerwerf, Naut Humon,
KidGoesting, Laminar, Golan Levin, Lia, Francisco Lopez, Lucia di
Monocordi, Peter Luining, Christian Marclay, Peter Max, Ikue Mori,
Numb, Robert Pravda, pxp, random k, Joost Rekveld, reMI, Seth Riskin,
Don Ritter, Otto von Schirach, Sutekh, tcw23, Telco Systems, Yasunao
Tone, Venetian Snares
@c is the Portuguese trio of Pedro Almeida, Pedro Tudela and
Miguel Carvalhais. Three PowerBooks united for experimental new
sounds. @c will be presenting a diversity of different
collaborations.
Maryanne Amacher's (USA) main concern is with understanding
and manipulating the perception of space and duration; with
finding ways to make people feel they are in a different and
usually more desirable place. Amacher has become a master of
controlling sounds that are comparatively 'faint', yet
produce a new sense of location and orientation.
Scott Arford (USA) investigates what happens when image is
interpreted as sound and sound as image. Discrete pieces of
static, dissected and tuned, are Arford's building blocks: radio
static, T.V. static, garbled transmissions, magnetic and
electrical interference, ground loops, shorts, and glitches -
the technological and cultural by-products of a media- obsessed
society.
Benton-C Bainbridge (USA) draws upon a youth misspent playing
with fire, food and electronics to compose moving pictures for
stage performance, generative installation and fixed media
dissemination. He was a founding member of several video
performance collectives in New York, such as 77 Hz, The Poool
and NNeng. His collaborations include work with Bill Etra and
David Linton's UnityGain.
Olivia Block (USA) combines field recordings, electronics and
acoustic segments. Working primarily with solo recorded media,
she makes sound compositions which make you think that you are
not listening to sound but rather that you have become part of
the sounding object. It is a form of music in which the abstract
and the visceral can co-exist.
COH (SE/RU): Ivan Pavlov has more links with the Russian
avant-garde than with Western rock-pop tradition. As a qualified
acoustic researcher he is involved in developing new
possibilities for sound synthesis. He has found a way to compose
single tones into an ensemble which provides both lyrical and
comic associations.
Sue Costabile (USA) is a photographer and video artist who
often explores the themes of the organic and the inorganic. Her
live performances involve various media including photographs,
negatives, drawings, watercolours, coloured transparencies and
tiny objects, set in motion, digitized and processed in
real-time.
Fred Collopy (USA) designed his Imager software to enable
himself and other artists to play images as musicians play with
sounds. He programmed the first version of it in 1977, since
then it has evolved as computers have changed. It is still
around today as one of the first real-time animation programs
ever.
Richard Devine's (USA) music makes references to experimental
techno but is so masterly that the repetitive nature of this
genre is hardly present. He was actually due to appear at Sonic
Acts last year but was unable to come. For Sonic Light he has
composed a special twelve-speaker piece
Effekt (DE/UK): Kaspar Daugaard and Stefan Mylleager won the
animation competition instituted by warp records and
Squarepusher in 2001, with their stunning video clip 'the
exploding psychology'. Together with Lasse Nielsen they formed Effekt.
They build their own software to create real-time, improvised
graphics for music. For Sonic Light, Effekt will be bringing new
video footage from their hometowns, Copenhagen and London, to
mix in with their always unpredictable computer-generated
imagery.
Dino Felipe (USA) is one of the schematic label artists present
at the festival. He will be playing some of his unreleased newer
music. His music moves languidly across the palettes of glitch,
microhouse, and electro-pop. At the same time the music delineates
between digital and analogue, the real and the imagined. The
performance at Sonic Light is part of his first ever European
tour.
Hazard (SE): Benny Nilsen started operating under the name
Hazard in 1996. He focuses on the perception of time and space
as experienced through sound. His source material mostly comes from
field recordings. However, for Sonic Light he will be giving several
short performances with source material taken from the various sounds
produced by a church organ.
Hecker (D): Florian Hecker is an independent artist in the
field of computer music. He has been doing research on mobile
performance tools, and using laptop computers since the first
wave of MEGO related concerts in 1996. During his performance he will
not only produce sound, but he will also control the lights in the
Sonic Light Box in relation to his music.
Edwin van der Heide (NL) is one of the curators of Sonic Light.
He will be presenting a short solo performance in which sound is
used to control the movements of a strong laser. The result is a
complex shape transforming space.
Arnold Hoogerwerf (NL) studied at the Interfaculty Image and
Sound and makes kinetic sound and image installations. As member
of the artist pool DAC~ , he initiated and realized various
performances and installations which deal with the perception of
space. At Sonic Light he will be programming part of the light
sequences in the Sonic Light Box.
Naut Humon (USA) is the director of Recombinant Media labs in
San Francisco. For over 25 years, Surround Traffic Control
creator, curator and conductor, Naut Humon has been staging
Recombinant events which have orchestrated a spatialized
cinesonic network based on project residencies created at its
treatment plant.
Besides his active collaborative work with Sonic Light, Naut
Humon will be presenting two remixes. 'Persepolis remixed' is his
remix of the Persepolis cd recently released by Asphodel. The cd
contains the original INA-GRM mix of Iannis Xenakis's composition and
remixes by renowned artists. The photographic still imagery that
accompanies the music comes from the actual photo
documentation of the live night-time event at the Persepolis
ruins in southern Iran during 1971. The second work by Naut Humon is a
remix of Granular Synthesis's 'Noisegate' produced in
collaboration with Tim Digulla.
KidGoesting (NL) has become one of the regular presenters at
Sonic Acts. For the last five years he has been active on the
Amsterdam electro scene. He is a resident DJ at the Mazzo and
organizes a monthly evening in Paradiso. KidGoesting will be
playing in the small auditorium on Saturday night.
Laminar (USA): Fred Szymanski is using the name Laminar for
his audiovisual installations. He has made a custom
twelve-speaker version of his video installation 'Retentions'
for Sonic Light at the Recombinant Media Labs. Retentions is
very powerful because of its original colourful imagery. Fred
Szymanski will not be present at the festival.
Golan Levin (USA) will give a number of performances with his
'Audiovisual Environment Suite'. This is a collection of self-written
software tools which he can use to generate highly articulate images
and sounds in real-time. With gestures he can draw and animate
visual patterns which are then interpreted as sounds.
Lia (AT/PT) makes very beautiful interactive applets for the
web and also works as a graphic designer. She has a very pure
and organic style within the digital domain. Lia will be
presenting different multiple collaborations.
Francisco Lopez (ES) bases his performances on his own sound
recordings. In his recordings he is not so much concerned with the
recognizability of the sound but rather the sonic nature of the sound
in itself. He will be presenting three twelve-speaker modules and a
performance which will take place in the dark. People will be given
blindfolds: Sonic no Light.
Peter Luining (NL) first received international recognition
with this work 'Clickclub' which he presented at the
Transmediale in Berlin in 1999. His use of sound in this work
earned him the unofficial title of 'next generation Superbad'.
Since 1997 his work has evolved towards an increasing minimalism
while continuing his earlier research on the dynamics of the
net. Following one of Luining's presentations, Remko Scha, Dutch
professor in computer arts remarked "If Mondrian were still
alive, this is what he would do."
Christian Marclay (USA) has explored the intimate relationship
between the visual record and recorded sound through cutting,
collage, and juxtaposition since the beginning of the seventies.
He has made a twelve-speaker module which will be played at
Sonic Light, without his presence.
Peter Max (DK) is creating simple universes by simple means and
composes and improvises his way to an interdisciplinary result. Peter
Max will present a
light and sound improvisation in which image and sound influence each
other directly.
Ikue Mori (USA/JP) is active in the area between improvised
music and pure sound. She gained renown with the group DNA and
later with Tohban Djan. She also often gives solo performances.
At Sonic Light she will also be presenting a twelve-speaker
composition.
Numb (JP): Takashi Kizawa is very active in the techno scene in
Japan. He has been developing futuristic breakbeats which are
not comparable to developments happening in Europe and the
United States. He makes true club music which he sees as a reply
from Japan to Autechre, Boards of Canada, Pole and Kit Clayton.
It will be his first performance in Holland.
Robert Pravda (NL,YU),
5x5x5, is a three dimensional matrix of ordinary household bulbs with
attached speakers,powered by 220 Volts. Movement and intensity of
light and sound in the limited universe of the object are the input
parameters for the controlling algorithm of the installation.
pxp (D/AT) stands for the department for penetration and
perversion. Think of equations which create anarchy instead of
assert order, and you've only begun to approximate the
experience of what it's like to see and hear pxp. pxp will be
giving two different audiovisual performances.
Random k (NL) does live video improvisations, mainly using
basic videomixer and feedback signals. Random k generates layers
with a series of mixers. He is looking for a more complex
interaction with sound or music.
Joost Rekveld (NL) is one of the curators of Sonic Light. He
will be making his vj-debut using a combination of ancient
television oscillators and the kind of optical set-up that he
has been using to make some of his abstract films.
reMI (AT) is a duo consisting of Renate Oblak, visuals, and
Michael Pinter, sound. Their work has been called 'music videos
for the knowledgeable' and is very radical in the way it
combines the nature of the material, using the gaps in between
signals. It is the directness of its effect which creates its
iconic power. reMI has developed and adapted work especially for
Sonic Light.
Seth Riskin (USA) will be presenting a number of short 'Light
Dance' performances. These are soundless, "space-defining
performances of light phenomena articulated by body
movements". Riskin attaches his own custom-designed light
instruments and projectors to his body. The light and
projections he produces interact with the architecture of the
space.
Don Ritter (USA) will, among other things, be performing his
audiovisual piece 'digestion', in which organic imagery,
originating as boiling water, is interactively transformed into
a series of mechanical movements with synchronized sound,
creating the impression that the sounds are being produced by
the imagery.
Otto von Schirach (USA) makes experimental neo-techno music for
musical intellectuals. He extends into the realm of cartoons,
you may hear hints of thrash and hardcore, and heavy,
hip-hop-influenced beats, an amalgamation of burbles, bleeps,
screeches and burps. He has made a special twelve-speaker
composition for Sonic Light.
Sutekh (USA): Seth Horvitz has released consistently
inconsistent electronic music on labels such as Force Inc./Mille
Plateaux, Source, Minus, Orthlorng Musork, Cytrax, and his own
Context label since 1997. Manipulating computers, samplers,
synthesizers, and found sounds, he has created everything from
deep, minimal house and techno to dense, dissonant noise
collage.
tcw23 (NL) a.k.a Arthur Ivens makes digitalfilms, mostly a mix
of classic cinema and new live cinema, relating to sound, the
space in which it is being performed, as well as the screens it
is projected on.
Telco Systems (NL) was set up in 2001 to explore new modes of
audiovisual expression. Their research focuses on digital
audiovisual input and output for which they build dedicated
collaborative systems. The hallmark of Telco's work is its lucid
and restrained aestheticism, which is closely related to the
computer technology they use.
Yasunao Tone (USA/JP) will perform 'Molecular Music' at Sonic
Light. The performance will make use of light sensors attached
to the projection screen. The amount of light falling on the
sensors determines the pitch of various tone generators.
Traditional Chinese and Japanese writing will be translated into
sound. Yasunao Tone will also be presenting a special
collaborative work at the festival.
Venetian Snares (CAN):
Aaron Funk of Venetian Snares makes an extremely complex form of
hardcore jungle/noise. He takes what was drum 'n' bass &
breakcore totally to another level. The music does not remain
the same for one moment. You are constantly caught off-guard. It
will be one long dance over the multi-speakers of the 'Sonic
Light Box'.
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lucas
@
v2.nl
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