| |
- Location:
Armory Center for the Arts, 145 N. Raymond, Pasadena (directions below)
- Admission: $10.00 or $5.00 for Seniors & Students
Featured Artists & Works
Copper Islands by Kristine Burns (U.S.A.)
Etudes Schaefferiennes by Richard Carbonell I Sauri (Spain) & Blas Payri
(France)
Un Regard Sur la Ville by Elsa Justel (France)
Faktura and Cross Contours by Dennis Miller (U.S.A.)
When Timbre Comes Apart by Joran Rudi (Norway)
Roadwork by Diana Simpson (Scotland) and Dan Marti (Australia)
Klang-Film by Mario Verandi (Germany)
Hard Boiled Wonderland by Daniel Zajicek & Hsiao-Lan Wang (U.S.A.)
Sounding Images 2005, an
evening of short experimental media works, is an adventuresome
exploration of cutting-edge art seamlessly meshing experimental,
digitally generated and manipulated imagery and electro-acoustic
sound. As the digital age opens new windows between
art disciplines, an explosion in new synthesized forms
are forecasting a future language with a limitless horizon. Sounding
Images 2005 will be a far-reaching, international compendium
from many of the most adventuresome of today's artists.
When SCREAM (Southern California Resource for Electro-Acoustic
Music) and NewTown issued a call seeking works integrating
digital music and imagery, little did they expect such
a stunning international response. The large number
new work and their overall quality affirmed the maturation
of the recent convergence in art disciplines and technologies. The
variety of aesthetics and social perspectives was a delightful
surprise reflected in the nine works ultimately selected
for Sounding Images 2005.
See following pages for artists' biographies and program
notes.
SCREAM, the Southern California Resource for Electro-Acoustic
Music, was created by Barry Schrader in 1986. The
purpose of SCREAM is to present annual concerts of new
electro-acoustic music. SCREAM is funded by
an ongoing grant from California Institute of the Arts,
which makes these concerts possible.
To Get to The Armory
Exit the 210 Freeway at Fair Oaks. Go South (away
from mountains) on Fair Oaks to Walnut. Turn left. There
will be a parking structure on the right side, across
from the park There is also limited street parking.
About the Artists and Their Work
Copper Islands by Kristine Burns
Copper Islands (2002) is the third in a series of "metal" pieces
that explore a symbiotic relationship between metallic sounds (both synthesized
and sampled) and largely monochromatic synthesized video. Audio materials
were created in SuperCollider and Sound Hack, while the video was generated
in Final Cut Pro. Duration: 9’00"
Composer and author Kristine H. Burns is Director of the
Electronic Music Studios at the Florida International University
School of Music. Her book Women and Music in the US Since
1900: an encyclopedia (Greenwood, 2002) was "Enthusiastically
recommended for large public libraries and music libraries." because "no
other source so comprehensively covers American women and
music simultaneously." (Library Journal). She is a
member of CMS, ICMA, IAWM, and SEAMUS, for which she serves
as Editor of Journal SEAMUS.
5 Etudes Schaefferiennes by Blas Payri,
Audio and Richard Carbonell i Saurí, Video
Etude aux profils mélodiques
Etude aux contrastes de masse
Etude aux élans
Etude aux sons nodaux
Etude aux profils de masse
These studies have a close articulation of audio and video, using continuous
evolutions or abrupt breaks of the audiovisual material. The audio has been
created first and the video has adopted the structure of the audio part.
The audio explores diverse possibilities of the sound
material and its articulation in a piece. Each study focuses
on a concept of Pierre Schaeffer’s Treaty of the
Sound Objects; it explores the possibilities of the given
concept creating a short "fugitive" development.
Born in Barcelona (Catalonia, Spain), Richard Carbonell I Sauri studied
and obtained a Degree in Fine Arts (Image major) at the Universidad de Barcelona,
and a Degree in Music Studies at the Conservatorio Superior de Música
de Barcelona, and obtained a Teaching Certificated in Flute, Musical Theory & Solfege,
and Piano. He created in 1993 a Film Independent company directing
and producing super 8 short films. One of them was presented in 1998 at the
Sitges International Film Festival and was awarded with several prizes. He
codirected the film 200km., a documentary presented in San Sebastian 2003
International Film Festival (and other Festivals around the world), showed
in commercial cinemas.
He studies Cinematography in Barcelona and Cinema direction
in ECAM (Madrid), and with the most important Catalan cinema
director Bigas Luna. All his work has been showed
in the most important International Festivals in Spain,
France, Bremen and Roma.
French-Spanish composer Blas Payri has
studied electro-acoustic composition in Lyon, Montréal
and Paris, and music applied to the image in Madrid. He
is interested in the poetry of sound, and often includes
texts and an audiovisual application of music. His electro-acoustic
works have been played in several international festivals
and radio broadcasts and have been awarded mentions at
the Bourges (France, 2002) and the Pierre Schaeffer (Italy,
2002) competitions.
Un regard sur la Ville (A look on the city) (2004)
Music and video by Elsa Justel
The city becomes a fantastic world when the images reflected on its surfaces
change its reality. This work was realized with photographs of windows
of the city of Paris and neighbors. The music is based on recorded sounds
of crystals and other materials of the city ambiance.
Elsa Justel was born in Argentine and has lived
in France since 1988. She studied composition and
electroacoustics in Buenos Aires and received her Doctorate
in Aesthetics, Sciences and Technologies of Arts at the
University of Paris. She teaches Avant-garde music at the
Conservatory of Mar del Plata, since 1980. Prizes
and awards include: Prix Ton Bruynèl, Netherlands
(2005), 5th. Competition of radio art, France-Germany (2003),
Video Evento d'Arte, Italy (2001) Prix Ars Electronica,
Linz, Austria (1992), Stipendienpreis of Darmstadt, Germany
(1990), International electroacoustic competition of Bourges,
France (1989 and 2001).
Faktura and Cross Contours by Dennis Miller (U.S.A.)
Cross Contours (2005) explores a variety of nearly identifiable icons and
images and develops numerous associations among them. Though never crossing
the line into the purely representational, it attempts to stimulate references
and mappings in the viewer. The work is (loosely) in three sections, with
each retaining the same color space despite the appearance of new or transformed
objects and forms. The music adds an affective layer and helps control
the work‚s dramatic development. All images in Cross Contours
were created using the Cinema 4D animation software, while the musical
elements were created with the Kyma System from Symbolic Sound and the
Tassman physical modeling synthesizer.
faktura (2003) is a work that explores a series of virtual
environments, focusing on the infinite variety of forms
and textures one might find. Morphing, evolving abstract
objects appear against a backdrop of evocative music that
sets the tone and affect of each scene. The piece develops
over a 9-minute time frame, yet presents a timeless, shifting
and (perhaps?) disorienting experience to the viewer. The
Russian term "faktura" has a variety of meanings,
including one published in the 1923 Constructivist manifesto:
manner of construction. Other definitions include surface
quality and texture.
Dennis Miller is on the Music faculty
of Northeastern University in Boston. His mixed media
works have been presented at numerous venues throughout
the world, most recently the DeCordova Museum, the New
York Digital Salon Traveling Exhibit, and the 2004 New
England Film and Video Festival. His work was also presented
at the gala opening of the new Disney Hall in Los Angeles
(2003) and at SIGGRAPH 2001 in the Emerging Technologies
gallery. His 3D still images have been published in Sonic
Graphics: Seeing Sound (Rizzoli Books) and Art in the Digital
Age (Thames and Hudson). Miller‚s music and artworks
are available at www.dennismiller.neu.edu.
Road Work (2005), Dani Marti (video artist) and
Diana Simpson (composer).
Road Work presents what is conventionally dismissed as mundane and ordinary
and revisits it in order to gather a new perspective. It invites the
audience to look more closely, at the people, the actions, the materials,
in an abstract light. Behind an unlikely exterior, hidden gestures, intricacies
of colour and texture are uncovered in such a way that, paradoxically, the
material becomes a composed dance, a ballet of sorts. The audience experiences
fleeting encounters and glimpsed lives, and the inaccessibility of this is
very much the point - Everyday events inherently embody an element of fiction
or theatre.
Dani Marti was born in Barcelona in 1963.
He is currently undertaking a MFA at the Glasgow School
of Art. He has exhibited extensively in Australia and has
exhibited in Barcelona and Singapore. His show "Variations
in a serious black dress" is currently being toured
by the major Regional Art Galleries in Australia and he
has been invited to participate in the next Beijing Biennale
2005. See www.danimarti.com for more information.
Diana Simpson (b. Glasgow, 1982) is currently
studying a Masters program in Electroacoustic Composition
at the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama, where
she is taught by Alistair MacDonald. Her works have been
performed throughout Scotland, and she has collaborated
with sculpture, video, animation and performance artists. In
2004 she was a prizewinner in the Insulae Electronicae
International Competition of Electroacoustic Music.
Klang-Film (2004), Mario Verandi
The film "Arbeiter verlassen die Fabrik" (Workers Leaving the Factory)
by Harun Farocki set the starting framework for the creation of this audio-visual
piece. The original soundtrack contains a voiceover reflecting on the
images shown. Most of the spoken texts were edited out and only a few
left. Therefore the film shown becomes essentially a silent movie.
This allows the incorporation of music as a new and influential shaping element
that opens up a new dimension for the perception of the visual sequences. This
work explores the sensory counterpoint of sounds and images and their interaction,
ambiguity and friction.
Mario Verandi (b. 1960 Buenos Aires) studied music
in Argentina and Barcelona and received his Ph.D. at the University of Birmingham
(UK). He was composer-in-residence at La Muse en Circuit (Paris), Césaré studio
de création musicale (Reims), ZKM (Karlsruhe), Cuenca Electroacoustic
Music Studios (Spain) and a guest of the 2000 artists-in-Berlin program of
the DAAD. Verandi's awards include the Bourges Electroacoustic Music Competition (France),
Musica Nova Competition (Prague), CIEJ Electronic Music Awards (Barcelona),
Prix Ars Electronica (Linz), Stockholm Electronic Arts Awards (Sweden), SGAE
Prize (Spain) and ZKM Commission Prize (Germany). Verandi´s music is
available from the Electronic Music Foundation record label.
Hard-Boiled Wonderland by Hsiao-Lan Wang (composition)
and Daniel Zajicek (video)
Hard-Boiled Wonderland began with a scenario for how the images should develop.
Yet after the initial images were rendered, the composition of music began,
guiding the visual component to the next stage. This process continued back
and forth till completion, making it a truly collaborative effort. The title
Hard-Boiled Wonderland is inspired by the Japanese novelist Haruki Murakami's
Hard-Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World. Murakami’s novel describes
two worlds that are very different, yet with lingering familiarity. Employing
the abstract and the recognizable, side-by-side, Hard-Boiled Wonderland is
an illusion that exceeds the expectations of the norm.
Hsiao-Lan Wang’s music investigates
the fundamental elements of musical communication through
new timbral, formal and technological relationships. Her
honors include the Pauline Oliveros Prize and Libby Larsen
Prize, ASCAP award, Pierre Schaeffer Computer Music Competition
(Italy), the Craig and Janet Swan Composer Prize for Orchestra,
the Composers Competition by Chamber Orchestra of Denton,
and American Composers Forum. Her works have been heard
at music festivals and on radio broadcast in Taiwan, the
United States, Canada, Belgium, the Netherlands, France,
and Czech Republic. She is currently a DMA candidate and
teaching fellow in composition at the University of North
Texas. www.hsiaolanwang.com
Daniel Zajicek is a composer, video artist,
and performer. As a creator, Daniel is most interested
in beauty and the bizarre, with his musical output consisting
of chamber, electronic, video, collaborative, and theater
works. Performances include the SEAMUS national conference,
Most Significant Bytes, Imagine II, and MusicAcoustic 2005:
Mix. He has been the recipient of the Richard and Candice
Faulk Composition Scholarship, and the David M. Schimmel
Memorial Scholarship, and as a pianist, Daniel was given
a scholarship from the National Federation of Music Clubs.
Daniel is currently attending the University of North Texas
for Graduate studies in Music Composition. |