[-empyre-] from Peer Bode: bold electronic experimenters

Timothy Conway Murray tcm1 at cornell.edu
Tue Sep 29 02:20:01 AEST 2015


Following up on Maureen's recollections of Kuntzel's time at ETC, I asked
him a decade later what it was that he enjoyed about Ithaca (which is 20
miles north of Owego, the location of the ETC studio, and the site of many
restaurants and bars). He looked at me, baffled, and said, "what is
Ithaca?"  All I wanted to do was remain in that loft where I could eat and
sleep with the machines!"


Timothy Murray
Professor of Comparative Literature and English
Taylor Family Director, Society for the Humanities
http://www.arts.cornell.edu/sochum/
Curator, Rose Goldsen Archive of New Media Art
http://goldsen.library.cornell.edu
A D White House
Cornell University,
Ithaca, New York 14853





On 9/28/15 12:14 PM, "Turim,Maureen Cheryn" <mturim at ufl.edu> wrote:

>----------empyre- soft-skinned space----------------------
>I love that Peer Bode remembered Thierry Kuntzel's visit to the ETC.  I
>remember chats Thierry and I had about the difference in working at the
>ETC from that of working with the technicians at INA l'Institut National
>de l'audio-visuel) in Paris, when he was a fellow there.  At INA the
>technical staff resisted any play with the image, and were hard to
>interest in the kind of experimentation he aimed to do.  Deregulating
>their standard imagery registration was not part of their customary
>practice.  So I know that his interaction with Peer was a pleasure for
>him.
>________________________________________
>From: empyre-bounces at lists.artdesign.unsw.edu.au
><empyre-bounces at lists.artdesign.unsw.edu.au> on behalf of Timothy Conway
>Murray <tcm1 at cornell.edu>
>Sent: Sunday, September 27, 2015 7:23 PM
>To: soft_skinned_space
>Subject: [-empyre-] from Peer Bode: bold electronic experimenters
>
>----------empyre- soft-skinned space----------------------
>Hi, everyone, I am forwarding this posting from Peer Bode:
>
>
>The ETC allowed many of we next generation young artists to participate in
>the adventures of electronic video thinking and making. When I think of
>making work at the ETC, I come back to the notions of experimentation,
>process and performance. There were the array of evolving electronically
>modified and electronically designed and built tools handed over to each
>artist, commonly for five days, in a space and location that had great
>ambience of comfort and particularly in Owego, great natural beauty, the
>Susquehanna river etc. The artists were given a fast workshop in equipment
>and system details by myself and in later years by Hank Rudolph. They were
>then left alone to explore and work. I was taken by Kristin Lucas¹s
>comment of how many tapes and recording she had made at her ETC
>residencies. Multiply that by the number of artists who worked in the ETC
>studios and you begin to see the sheer enormous scale of work, now
>history, that was made at the ETC. That is a cultural heritage, a huge
>virtual archive across many artists.
>
>The thinking regarding my personal video work at the ETC goes something
>like this. There was electronic learning and experimenting, process and
>performance. Having studied the New American Cinema in Binghamton and also
>being inspired by the New Music richness, including electronic music, wow,
>that was internalized as an understanding, a striving and teasing out a
>set of electronic practices, atmospheres, certain qualities, textures,
>certain rhythms and durations Šparticular occurrences and discoveries Š
>ways of opening a thinking space, a kind of breathing, a speeding up and
>slowing down. There was this electronic vibratory easing, the moving image
>and sound going from glancing to a being sticky. The point being, reactive
>spaces, processes and dialogues. Reflective surfaces to see, to
>electronically re-network and to internally discover and reinforce.
>
>All of this was in combinations with linguistic concerns. They were both
>influences bumping up against each other. The linguistic together with the
>direct intangible states, realisms, materialisms and art. We also had
>artists Ralph Hocking, Larry Gotham, Ken Jacobs, the dance artists Arnie
>Zane, Bill T, Jones and Lois Welk and the writer and theorist Maureen
>Turim to spar with.
>
>The actual moving image and sound makers are in fact the great fans, the
>experimenters, the researchers of the electronic moments. Video artist
>Shegiko Kubota came to the ETC several times. I very much liked Shegiko¹s
>writings, including she writing that video was ³the vacation of art². And
>there was also ³video as the vengeance of the vagina².  Video as a
>vacation of art Š interesting.  In that vein, we are free, if only
>intermittently and yes heroically, free of arts historical and critical
>burdensŠ open spaces, a kind of freedom.
>
>As still a new form, even now, video and electronic arts are free to be
>used to experiment and work in those often contested strange and wonderful
>regions, those spaces and durations of the unassigned. The photographer,
>filmmaker, videomaker and digital artist Hollis Frampton also considered
>and speculated in these ideas. He, by the way taught, early in his career,
>at Hunter College.  Hollis suggested in a moment of humbleness or not,
>that film art (the moving image and sound art) was superior as the single
>art that incorporated the codes of all the other arts AND that film art
>was 20 years ahead of the painting and sculpture arts. I still like his
>conceit.  Maybe it is in fact 40 years, including the 20 years the
>electronic arts have lost using commercial software, that forever renewing
>commercial redesign product. As we get through this period and as hardware
>and software settles around useful structures and systems, (open sourceŠ
>new hardware instruments) interested people, young media artists, will
>move quickly and deeply into more personal investigations using electronic
>materials, tools, instruments, ideas and cultures.
>
>The years of my engagement with the facilities of the Experimental
>Television Center and the remarkable people guiding and participating in
>its adventure have convinced me of the importance of pushing back, of the
>value of alternative thinkings, practices and communities. Nicholas Ray
>had thoughts about alternative cultures. Nicolas Ray, American auteur film
>director, who we in Binghamton had the opportunity experience as filmmaker
>and mentor and who together with Binghamton film students made a multi
>image electronically inspired film had thoughts about alternative
>cultures. Nick made video synthesizer recordings at the ETC.  The
>multi-frame narrative feature film ³We Can¹t Go Home Again² offered the
>suggestion for a 1970¹s generation of young people to ³find your
>communities and take care of each other.²Not bad.  The film and the
>accompanying documentary film, ³Don¹t Expect Too Much²by Susan Ray is
>distributed by Oscilloscope films.
>
>The French theorist and artist Thierry Kunztel  came to the ETC in Owego,
>via South America in 1981. In conversation I asked him if there was
>something singularly important that he learned studying with Christian
>Metz and Roland Barthes.  His response was quick. He said it was the
>importance of making actual media image and sound work. Given that Thierry
>himself was such an important and celebrated writer, his comments
>concerning the importance of making media work was a surprise. I agreed
>with him. I would add on today Š  make the media work and make the
>situations to see and hear and reflect on the media work. Look at the
>work. Listen to the work. Keep looking and listening to the work. Keep
>being in dialogue with the work.
>
>
>The ETC experience Š wow Š.  Fortunately the ETC studio and programs¹
>closing have not put an end to it all.  Although many of us are still
>trying to get over it.  The Experimental Television¹s immediate
>organization children, the Institute for Electronic Arts (IEA) Alfred and
>Signal Culture, Owego continue the experimental electronic arts
>imagination and outreach today.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>Thank you Š Bests, Peer
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>_______________________________________________
>empyre forum
>empyre at lists.artdesign.unsw.edu.au
>http://empyre.library.cornell.edu
>_______________________________________________
>empyre forum
>empyre at lists.artdesign.unsw.edu.au
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