[Microsound-announce] Roulette June 6th
Matthew Underwood
mathunderwood at gmail.com
Tue May 22 08:23:59 EDT 2007
Roulette, NYC
20 Greene Street
Evening Performance on Wednesday June 6th
Also sets by Matthew Underwood and Aaron Miller also performing!
www.mattunderwood.net
www.aaronmiller.org/
http://www.roulette.org/events/2007_06.html
Sandin Exhibition
Evening Performance on Wednesday June 6th
Produced by the Institute for Electronic Arts @ Alfred University
Roulette will host an exhibition of video synthesizers from the
Sandin Image processor to current computer-based systems presented by
The Institute for Electronic Art in cooperation with the School of
Art and Design at Alfred University . Visitors will be able to
manipulate images and sounds using a hand built Sandine Image
Processor, Wobbulator, and Jitter inteactive system. On Wednesday
evening June 6 th there will be solo and duo concerts by Stephen
Vitiello, Andrew Deutsch, Sawako Kato (from Tokyo) Tammy Bracket and
Peer Bode (via cellphone from China).
The Institute for Electronic Arts is a high technological research
studio facility within the New York State College of Ceramics at
Alfred University, NY. The IEA encourages and supports projects that
involve interactive multi-media systems, experimental sonic/video
production, digital imaging, and publications. The IEA is committed
to developing cultural interactions spurred by technological
experimentation and artistic investigations.
About the Performers:
Stephen Vitiello is a sound and media artist. Originally from New
York, he is now based in Richmond, Virginia. Vitiello's CD releases
include Scratchy Monsters, Laughing Ghosts (New Albion Records),
Buffalo Bass Delay (Hallwalls), Scanner/Vitiello (Audiosphere/Sub
Rosa), Bright and Dusty Things (New Albion Records), Scratchy Marimba
(Sulphur UK/Sulfur USA), Light of Falling Cars (JDK Productions) and
Uitti/Vitiello (JDK Productions). Stephen's website:
www.stephenvitiello.com
Andrew Deutsch (b.1968) is a sound, video and graphic artist who
lives in Hornell, NY and teaches Sound & Video Art in the Division of
Expanded Media at Alfred University. He received his BFA in Video Art
and Printmaking from Alfred University in 1990 and his MFA in
Integrated Electronic Art from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in
1994. He is a member of the Institute for Electronic Art at Alfred
University and the Pauline Oliveros Foundation Board of Advisors and
is a former member of the Pauline Oliveros Foundation Board of
Directors (1999 - 2001). Andrew's website: www.infoblvd.net/
andrewandjen/index.htm
Sawako Kato is a Tokyo/NYC-based timeline based artist and sound
sculptor who creates the digital nostalgic world using technologies.
Once through the processor named Sawako, elements in everyday life
float in space vividly with a digital yet organic texture. Her unique
sonic world has been called "post romantic sound" by Boston's Weekly
Dig. For these 5 years, Sawako did more than 80 live performances in
Japan, USA, Paris and London, and last year her 2nd album "hum" was
released from NY based minimal label, 12k. Sawako's website:
www.troncolon.com
Tammy Renée Brackett received a BA in fine arts from Alfred
University in Alfred, N.Y. in 2003 and an MFA in Electronic
Integrated Art from the School of Art and Design at Alfred University
in 2006. Critiques of the impact of scientific "breakthroughs" on
identity formation inform Brackett's work. Using new and traditional
artistic media, she explores the factors that contribute to the
invention of new identities and the overlapping fluid structures
behind them. Brackett's recent work uses scientific data, such as the
Map of the Human Genome, brainwave biofeedback, and DNA frequencies,
as elements in her musical compositions and surround-sound
installations. Brackett has exhibited in Japan, Croatia, Hungary, and
the United States. She has been awarded the 2005 College Art
Association Professional Development Fellowship for Visual Artists,
funded by the NEA, and is currently a Visiting Assistant Professor in
Expanded Media at Alfred University's School of Art and Design.
Peer Bode is a nationally and internationally exhibiting artist with
media works in museum collections world-wide. He is also an active
educator and studio advocate and facilitator of independent
electronic media. He is associated with the renowned American Alfred
and Owego schools of new media imaging. He is Professor of Video Arts
at the School of Art and Design and Co-Founder and Co-Director of the
Institute for Electronic Arts (IEA), NYSCC at Alfred University in
Alfred, NY. His work is produced at the IEA, Alfred NY; the
Experimental Television Center, Owego, NY and Pep Studios, Hornell
and Rochester, NY.
About the Sandin
The Dan Sandin Image Processor, or "IP," is an analog video processor
with video signals sent through processing modules that route to an
output color encoder. The IP's most unique attribute is its non-
commercial philosophy, emphasizing a public access to processing
methods and the machines that assist in generating the images. The IP
was Sandin's electronic expression for a culture that would "learn to
use High-Tech machines for personal, aesthetic, religious, intuitive,
comprehensive, and exploratory growth." This educational goal was
supplemented with a "distribution religion" that enabled video
artists, and not-for-profit groups, to "roll-your-own" video
synthesizer for only the cost of parts and the sweat and labor it
took to build it. It was the "Heathkit" of video art tools, with a
full building plan spelled out, including electronic schematics and
mechanical assembly information. Tips on soldering, procuring
electronic parts and Printed Circuit boards, were also included in
the documentation, increasing the chances of successfully building a
working version of the video synthesizer.
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