Electronic Cinema at ATA, San Francisco, September 24 and October 28


September 24 & October 28
8:oo pm
ATA
992 Valencia Street
San Francisco
(415) 824-3890
$8.00, $6.00 valid student ID

Funded by Southern Exposure’s Alternative Exposure grant program and co-presented by SF Cinematheque, VOLUME and Kadet Kuhne present Electronic Cinema, two evenings of live scores for experimental films. Bay Area artists Elise Baldwin, Lissom, myrmyr, and Kadet Kuhne will perform a live sound scores for experimental films and videos by Bay Area artists Vanessa Woods, Anthony Discenza, SUE-C., Paul Clipson, and Maia Cybelle Carpenter.

The long-standing practice of early Dadaist and Modernist filmmaking to contemporary practices of experimental film and video has been paralleled by an avant-garde and cutting-edge approach to music composition. The role of technology in developing these divergent art forms has been vital and inseparable from the aesthetic impact and meaning of the works. However integral sound has become to our interpretation of picture, there is still such a wide gap not only between the understanding of the impact sound has on image, but also between sound and visual artists in the performative arts arena and visual art world.  Electronic Cinema seeks to bridge these two arts communities by pairing Bay Area film and video makers with Bay Area electronic sound and music composers, with an emphasis on experimentation in approach, tools and concept.

September 24th, 8pm
Lissom will perform a score for a film by Vanessa Woods.
Elise Baldwin will perform scores for three videos by Anthony Discenza.

October 28th,  8pm
myrmyr will perform a score for a work by Sue-C.
Kadet Kuhne will perform music scores for a new film directed by Paul Clipson and two films by Maia Cybelle Carpenter.

About the artists:

Lissom (Tana Sprague) is a sound and video artist, transfixed with micro details. With focus fluctuating between digital and organic, her work creates a space where one complements the other. Inspired by the elegant complexity of organic forms, she utilizes various electronic and digital devices to synthesize a similar enveloping intricacy. Since 2004, Tana has worked with Recombinant Media Lab, and in January of 2009 she lead the partnership development with Gray Area Foundation for the Arts and RML, and was the Director of Operations at GAFFTA and RML. She has a Bachelor of Arts degree in Interdisciplinary Computing and the Arts at the University of California at San Diego, where she was granted two consecutive research fellowships at the California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology. She received a Master of Fine Arts degree in Electronic Music and Recording Media at Mills College.

Vanessa Woods graduated with an MFA in film, with honors, from the San Francisco Art Institute. Her artwork and films have been exhibited internationally and have received numerous awards including a Murphy and Cadogan Fellowship for Film from the San Francisco Arts Commission, a Film Arts Foundation Personal Works Grant, and the San Francisco Art Institute’s MFA Film Fellowship. Woods’ films have been broadcast or screened by the Education Channel, the Centre International d’Art (France), The Anthology Film Archives (New York), the Oberhausen Film Festival (Germany) and San Francisco International Film Festival. Woods is currently working on several new films, including feature-length documentary titled Mimita, which follows a family of women raising their adopted child in the Bronx, New York.


Elise Baldwin is active in the San Francisco experimental music and electronic art community, Elise Baldwin focuses on solo intermedia performance and collaborative music ventures. Her work demonstrates clear predilections: a fondness for recombinant media and collage techniques, a fascination with human memory and technological forms of communication, and a historic multiplicity with regard to medium. Elise holds a degree in Film and Video production as well as an MFA in Electronic Music from Mills College. She has designed sound and created musical compositions for many theater, dance and film productions. She has performed recently at SF Cinematheque, ResBox, New York Electronic Arts Festival, San Francisco Electronic Music Festival, Edgetone Music Festival, the Brutal Sound FX Festival, E.S.P. Media Lounge, CalArts CEAIT Festival and the National Queer Arts Festival. She has received numerous awards, including Experimental Television Center and CESTA residencies, a Harvestworks Artist in Residency, the Frogs Peak Award for Experimental Music, and a Howard Scripps Award.

Anthony Discenza was born in New Jersey and currently lives in Oakland, California. He received his undergraduate degree in Studio Art at Wesleyan University in 1990, and an MFA at the California College of Arts and Crafts in 2000. In addition to various individual projects, he participates in HalfLifers—an ongoing collaboration with longtime friend and fellow video artist, Torsten Z. Burns. Discenza’s solo and collaborative work has been shown at numerous national and international venues, including The Whitney Museum of American Art, The New York Video Festival, the Pandaemonium Festival, The Pacific Film Archive, The Impakt Festival, The Philadelphia Museum of Art, and the Museum of Modern Art in New York. He was recently included in the 2000 Whitney Biennial.

myrmyr is Agnes Szelag & Marielle Jakobsons (aka darwinsbitch) who live in Oakland, California. With the violin and cello as their basis, the duo creates an intimate chamber music atmosphere with an arsenal of electronics and instruments. They merge improvisation and experimental song forms to create works often inspired by their common Baltic heritage.  Since 2004, they have performed across the West and East Coasts, and in 2009 released their debut album The Amber Sea on Digitalis Recordings.  They are currently in production with their sophomore release, Fire Star, recorded at Shasta Mountain in April 2010.

SUE-C. (Sue Slagle) is a visual and performing artist based in Oakland. Her works challenge the norms of photography, video, and technology by blending them all into an organic and improvisational live performance setting. Employing a variety of digital tools to create an experimental animation “instrument,” Slagle synthesizes cinema from photographs, drawings, watercolors, hand-made papers, fabrics and miniature interactive lighting effects. Slagle has collaborated with musicians such as Morton Subotnick, Luc Ferrari, Antye Greie (AGF) and Joshua Kit Clayton at a variety of international venues including the San Francisco International Film Festival, REDCAT (Los Angeles), Ars Electronica (Linz), MUTEK (Montreal), SONAR (Barcelona), MonkeyTown (NYC), and Activating the Medium (San Francisco). Her solo performances combine live imagery with a live soundtrack using her own voice, small sound effects devices and assorted electronic instruments. She currently teaches “Math & Media” at the California College of Arts (CCA) in Oakland.

Kadet Kuhne is a media artist whose work spans the audiovisual spectrum. With the goal of forming somatic experiences which can prompt visceral responses to sound and movement, Kadet openly exposes the use of technology in her practice by employing fragmented, jump-cut edits and amplifying evidence of sonic detritus. This glitch aesthetic, contrasted with layered ambient reflection, is intended to heighten tensions between motion and stasis: a balanced yet heightened “nervous system” to reflect our own. Trained in jazz guitar in her youth, Kadet became attached to the instinctive nature of improvisation which led her to the California Institute of the Arts where she studied Composition and Integrated Media. As an award-winning filmmaker she has numerous shorts that have screened worldwide including Infinite Delay, which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival. Her installations involve a combination of motion sensors, customized software and online virtual exploring themes of communication and control. Kadet’s compositions twist signal processing, FM synthesis and neurological impulses into experimental electronic ambiences that make your cilia vibrate in curious patterns. Select exhibitions and performances include the Museum of Art Lucerne, LACMA, Musees de Strasbourg, Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, REDCAT, Museum of Contemporary Art-LA, Not Still Art Festival, San Francisco Arts Commission Gallery, The LAB, Highways Performance Gallery and the New York Underground Film Festival.

Paul Clipson has shown his films internationally in various galleries, festivals and performance venues in Spain, Germany, The Netherlands, Italy, Switzerland, Japan and Russia, as well as throughout the U.S. He works primarily in film, video and paper, often collaborating on live performances and installations with sound artists and musicians. Since 2003, Clipson has collaborated with sound/music artists such as Tarentel, Jefre Cantu-Ledesma, Joshua Churchill, Brendan Murray, Robert Rich, Jim Haynes, Rosy Parlane, Marielle Jakobsons and Metal Rouge. His work has been featured in the Tanned Tin Festival,
San Francisco Exploratorium, DWARS Festival, San Francisco International Film Festival, San Francisco Art Institute, Bay Area Now 5, the Edinburgh Film Festival, New York Film Festival and the Rotterdam International Film Festival. Clipson attended the University of Michigan, studying film, painting and drawing.

Maia Cybelle Carpenter is an artist and curator, who has built a body of research and art work around theoretical problems. In addition, she has mobilized a community of artists to wrestle with similar considerations in their creative process. Through explorations of the material specificity of film and video, which produces new dialogues with philosophical and
current cultural approaches to visual form. Taking identity politics beyond overt polemics, her work engages its audience in multi-layered examinations of identity through spatial experiences. Maia positions her work against the narrative expectations of moving-image media. She received her MFA in 2001 from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in Film/Video/NewMedia and her BA in 1997 from Barnard College, Columbia University in Women’s Studies and Film Studies.

rE/Visioning the Collection at the de Young

September 10, 2010
6:00-8:30pm
de Young Museum
Golden Gate Park
50 Hagiwara Tea Garden Drive
San Francisco, CA 94118

The de Young Museum in San Francisco has commissioned eight electronic sound and media artists to “plug into” permanent collection to create new collaborative performances. These commissions curated by VOLUME and inspired by art pieces chosen from the de Young’s collection, will be performed on Friday, September 10th from 6:00 to 8:30. This event is presented in partnership with the San Francisco Electronic Music Festival.

Artists Featured in rE/ visioning the Collection:
Dave Aju, J.D. Beltran, Nate Boyce, Lorne Chasse, Seth Horvitz, Kadet Kuhne, Lucky Dragons, and David Wilson.

de Young Collection Artwork Revisioned:

Bands of Color in Four Directions and in all Combinations by Sol Lewitt
Seth Horvitz and Nate Boyce will collaborate on a sound and visual performance in the Wilsey Court. They will use the system of sequential combinations set up by Lewitt, which contains fertile material for conversion into sound and moving images.


Loren Chasse will create a performance in the Koret Auditorium based on the Andy Goldsworthy installation Drawn Stone. He will use large rubbings or impressions of the installation at the entrance to the museum, which will be displayed lying flat on the stage. An edit of recordings made in the entranceway will be amplified through small speakers spread out along the edge of the paper. Chasse will perform sounds generated from the use of stones and the same instruments used in the recording. The audience will be able to enter the stage to experience this work in an intimate manner.

The Piazzoni Murals Room
Lucky Dragons will create an interactive musical and visual performance in The Piazzoni Murals Room in collaboration with David Wilson. They will use projected live drawings and animations of drawings in process, along with videos created in the northern Californian hill landscape. The projections will respond to the aesthetic of the murals. The musical content would be tonal, dynamic, and rhythmic contours–landscape drones, produced by the audience using interfaces custom-made for the performance.

Anti-Mass by Cornelia Parker
Dave Aju
will collaborate with San Francisco visual artist JD Beltran to produce an immersive sound and visual environment in the Wilsey Court entitled Anti-Master. Aju and Beltran will perform a work that acts as an aural complement to Parker’s piece. As the sculpture was constructed out of the remains of a burnt down Alabama church, they will use acoustic Gospel and Southern Baptist Church recordings, digitally dissect and process them beyond recognition, then reassemble them into a structure unlike the original in form, but equally moving in depth and emotional content. Parker’s Anti-Mass is a brilliant example of how contemporary sculpture can connect with typically unrelated cultures through purposefully chosen source material, and elicit stronger feelings from the viewer with the respective narrative in mind.

Model for Total Reflective Abstraction by Josiah McElheny.
Just as this piece was designed to create numerous reflections of its surroundings, Kadet Kuhne will create a sonic representation of movement in the surrounding space. The sounds triggered will be representative of how McElheny’s mirrored objects might sound if they could actually emit sounds: resonant, vibrant and spherical. Kuhne’s collaborative soundscape will not only give spectators an experience of seeing themselves and the gallery’s artworks in the reflections, but also hearing themselves in the space as if reflected off the sculpture itself.
At 9:00 immediately following rE/visioning the Collection, the San Francisco Electronic Music Festival will take place at the Brava Theater featuring Trimpin, Podblotz, MKM (G. Mueller, J. Kahn, R. Möslang). SF Electronic Music Festival ticket holders receive discounted tickets into the de Young’s galleries this evening: $6.00/adults, $4/seniors. For more information and discounted tickets for de Young members.

A free shuttle will take guests from the de Young Museum to the SFEMF at the Brava Theater.

VOLUME @ PERFORM! NOW!

July 31, 2010 7-10pm
August 1, 2010 2-6pm
993 Hill Street
Los Angeles, CA 90012

Chinatown will play host to the second annual PERFORM! NOW! Festival. Upwards of 40 performances will take place inside and outside an array of Chinatown venues. The programming allows for appropriate focus, time, context and space for uninterrupted engagement with large audiences, and provides the best possible arena for each performance.

VOLUME is curating two days of sound performances on July 31 and August 1 as part of the PERFORM! NOW! Festival.

Saturday, July 31, 7-10pm
933 Hill St., Los Angeles, CA 90012


VOLUME will present a rare 3-hour performance by acclaimed Los Angeles artist Steve Roden.
Steve Roden is a visual and sound artist from Los Angeles. His work includes painting, drawing, sculpture, film/video, sound installation, and performance. Roden has performed his soundworks at various arts spaces and experimental music festivals worldwide including the Serpentine Gallery London, The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, The Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, The DCA Dundee Scotland, as well as performance tours of Brazil and Japan. He has also released over 20 cds of audio works on labels worldwide.

Sunday, August 1, 2-7pm
933 Hill St., Los Angeles CA 90012

VOLUME will present series of very intimate headphone performances by a diverse and unprecedented selection of artists including Jen Boyd, Julia Holter, Kadet Kuhne, Marc Manning, Adam Overton, Akira Rabelais, Shuttle358, Mark So, Sublamp, Mark Trayle, Justin Varis, and Sander Roscoe Wolff.


2:00    Julia Holter
2:30    Mark Trayle
3:00    Sander Roscoe Wolff
3:30    Jen Boyd
4:00    Mark So
4:30    Sublamp
5:00    Marc Manning
5:30    Justin Varis
6:00    Adam Overton
6:30    Shuttle358
7:00    Akira Rabelais
7:30    Kadet Kuhne

Schedule and venue subject to change

Visit performnow.tumblr.com for more information.

Presence

June 26, 2010
Torrance Art Museum
Torrance, CA

An afternoon of immersive sound, video, and durational performance work at the Torrance Art Museum. Presence plays with the multiple meanings of the title to contextualize divergent practices by a unique selection of artists all working across a spectrum of time based media, whether it is video, sound, durational performance, or installation.

Artists include Jen Boyd (audio performance), Frank Bretschneider (screening), Jeff Cain & Mark Steger (collaborative video performance/installation), Heather Cassils & Kadet Kuhne (sound and durational performance), Richard Chartier (sound element), i8u & Cédrick Eymenier (audio/visual performance), Monique Jenkinson (video screening), Marc Manning (audio/visual performance), Mem1 (audio/visual performance), A.B. Miner (film screening), Yann Novak (audio performance), Adam Overton (durational performance), Taisha Paggett (durational performance), Semiconductor (video screening), Sublamp (audio/visual performance).