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Subject:

FW: [secretcinema] Vasulka Video: Pioneers of Electronic Art, 5-7 March 2004

From:

Sutton - Damian Peter <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

Sutton - Damian Peter <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Fri, 27 Feb 2004 11:57:55 -0000

Content-Type:

text/plain

Parts/Attachments:

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text/plain (1 lines)

 



	-----Original Message----- 

	From: Secret Cinema [mailto:[log in to unmask]] 

	Sent: Fri 27/02/2004 11:34 

	To: Secret Cinema 

	Cc: 

	Subject: [secretcinema] Vasulka Video: Pioneers of Electronic Art, 5-7 March 2004

	

	



	LUX presents a unique opportunity to see the work of video pioneers Steina

	and Woody Vasulka, who will be present at several of the events

	

	...

	

	VASULKA VIDEO

	Pioneers of Electronic Art

	

	5-6-7 March 2004

	at Candid Arts Trust & University of Westminster

	

	STEINA & WOODY VASULKA began to use the medium of video as early as 1969,

	first documenting jazz performances, rock concerts and the underground

	activities of Œillegitimate culture¹. Exploiting the relationship between

	the electronic signals for both sound and image, they started a didactic

	exploration of the limitless possibilities of video processing using a range

	of newly crafted technological tools. Each tape produced was a by-product of

	the dialogue between the Vasulkas and their machines, as they systematically

	analysed and deconstructed the fundamental materiality of video through

	spatial, temporal and sound/image manipulation. The Vasulkas are the

	creative pathfinders of the electro-magnetic spectrum, whose works ­ infused

	with the fizz and crunch of the analogue age ­ are as mesmerising and

	astounding today as in their original moment of discovery.

	

	STEINA and WOODY VASULKA will present three unique events during the

	weekend, which includes a continuous one-day gallery projection of key

	works.

	

	Friday 5 March 2004, 7pm

	at Candid Arts Trust, 3 Torrens Street, London N1

	SCREENING

	Steina and Woody Vasulka will discuss the formation of The Kitchen, the

	electronic arts laboratory they co-founded in 1971, and their early years as

	part of the illegitimate counter-culture of New York. Plus screening of

	PARTICIPATION (1969-71, 63 mins), an anthology of performances recorded on

	their first Sony Portapak, featuring Don Cherry, Miles Davis, Jimi Hendrix,

	Keith Jarrett, Jethro Tull plus Warhol Factory superstars Candy Darling,

	Eric Emerson, Taylor Mead, Ondine, Holly Woodlawn and many others.

	Tickets £4

	

	Saturday 6 March 2004, 11am­5pm

	at Candid Arts Trust, 3 Torrens Street, London N1

	VIDEO GALLERY

	Continuous single-channel projection of image-processed tapes from the

	Vasulka archive, made on analogue equipment in the 1970s. Approximately 3

	hours of tapes made between 1970-79 will be shown twice throughout the day.

	Includes SKETCHES, STUDIES, DON CHERRY, VIOLIN POWER, INTERFACE, SWAN LAKE,

	BLACK SUNRISE, SPACES II, DISTANT ACTIVITIES, HOME, THE MATTER, NOISEFIELDS,

	SOLO FOR 3, REMINISCENCE, SOUNDGATED IMAGES, 1-2-3-4, TELC, SOUNDSIZE,

	HERALDIC VIEW, C-TREND, LAND OF TIMOTEUS, NO. 25, FLUX, BAD.

	Free Admission

	

	Saturday 6 March 2004, 7:30pm

	at University of Westminster, 309 Regent Street, London W1

	PERFORMANCE

	Steina will present a live adaptation of her seminal tape VIOLIN POWER

	(1970-78), using a MIDI violin and customised software to process the video

	image in real time. Plus screening of ORBITAL OBSESSIONS (1975-77, 25 mins),

	a multi-layered, studio performance/exploration of reshaped video space.

	Tickets £4

	

	Sunday 7 March 2004, 3pm

	at Candid Arts Trust, 3 Torrens Street, London N1

	LECTURE

	Woody Vasulka presents an illustrated lecture on audio-visual relationships

	in early video and cathode ray tube experimentation, featuring classic works

	that explore the similarities between the electronic sound and image

	signals. Including tape examples of works by the Vasulkas and others.

	Tickets £4

	

	Tickets available only on the door.

	All day screening at Candid on Saturday 6 March is free admission.

	Candid is behind Angel station.

	University of Westminster is just above Oxford Circus.

	For more info call LUX 020 7503 3980. www.lux.org.uk

	

	Presented by LUX in association with CARTE, Candid Arts Trust and The Wire.

	

	Steina¹s performance complements the conference IMPACT AND LEGACY presented

	by CARTE www.carte.org.uk

	Candid Arts Trust events form part of the Islington Art & Design Fair 2004

	www.candidarts.com

	Read about the Vasulka's in the March issue of The Wire www.thewire.co.uk

	Learn more and see QuickTime movies at the Vasulka's website www.vasulka.org

	

	Š

	

	STEINA & WOODY VASULKA: PIONEERS OF ELECTRONIC ART

	

	Since 1969, when they had their first access to primitive video equipment,

	the Vasulkas have conducted a dynamic exploration of the electro-magnetic

	image. Woody was born in Czechoslovakia in 1937 and trained as an engineer

	and filmmaker, Steina was born in Iceland in 1940 and became a professional

	musician. They married in 1964 and immigrated to America the following year.

	After seeing the ground-breaking TV as a Creative Medium exhibition at the

	Howard Wise Gallery in 1969, they devoted their activity to video, first

	documenting New York cultural events including jazz and rock concerts and

	underground performances using a Sony Portapak camera. Soon after, they

	began to experiment with using VCS3 and Buchla audio synthesisers to alter

	the electronic video signal, making their first image-processed tapes.

	

	In 1971, together with Andy Mannick, the Vasulkas co-founded The Electronic

	Kitchen, an electronic laboratory for experimentation with sounds and

	images. The Kitchen soon became one of the artistic centres of New York,

	presenting screenings, performances and concerts ranging from the new music

	of La Monte Young to the new wave of Talking Heads, and it continues today

	as one of the city¹s most prestigious multi-media art spaces.

	

	Throughout the 1970s, the Vasulkas continued their tireless investigations

	into the phenomenology of video, with each tape produced being effectively a

	by-product of the dialogue between them and their machines. Steina and Woody

	did not create their images from video synthesisers; their unique approach

	involved the processing of previously recorded material through a series of

	modular units, frequently using the input of a separate electronic signal to

	control the effects.

	

	Working in collaboration with creative engineers including George Brown,

	Bill Etra and Eric Siegel, they developed a new range of tools and devices

	with which they can further investigate the image. Their arsenal of analogue

	equipment contains the Rutt/Etra Scan Processor, Dual Colorizer, Multikeyer,

	Programmer, Horizontal Drift Variable Clock and the Field Flip/Flop

	Switcher. Much of their work explores and exploits the similarity of the

	sound and image signals, producing a mesmerising range of synaesthetic video

	before the onset of the digital age.

	

	In 1973, the Vasulkas moved to Buffalo to teach at the Media/Study Center,

	where they become part of a faculty including filmmakers and theorists Tony

	Conrad, Hollis Frampton and Paul Sharits. The pair also began to work

	individually during this time. Steina embarked on the Machine Vision series,

	developing mechanical systems to control the camera, distancing it from the

	human viewpoint. Woody began to explore the digital realm, custom-designing

	the Digital Image Articulator. Both subsequently worked on interactive

	projects and large-scale installations, adding a sculptural or monumental

	element to their practice.

	

	As pioneers of video art, Steina and Woody Vasulka stand alongside Nam June

	Paik, Peter Campus and Joan Jonas, with the Kitchen and their own studio as

	much a point of focus as the early activist groups Video Free America,

	Raindance and Guerilla Television and the innovative American television

	laboratories of NCET, WNET and WGBH. This weekend of events is the first

	opportunity in decades to see a substantial collection of the Vasulka¹s

	early works in the UK, and a rare chance to hear the exuberant and vivacious

	duo discuss their work from a practical, rather than theoretical, point of

	view.

	

	

	

	

	

	Yahoo! Groups Links

	

	<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:

	     http://groups.yahoo.com/group/secretcinema/

	

	<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:

	     [log in to unmask]

	

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	     http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

	

	

	

	



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