[-empyre-] Alan Sondheim

Renate Ferro rferro at cornell.edu
Thu May 2 06:41:49 AEST 2019


Dear Alan, 
Your cross-disciplinary interests have always been appreciated on –empyre-.  We are so happy to hear from you and hope that you will feel better in the near future to even host a month!  We hope that all of subscribers both pioneers like yourself and new artists and writers and technologists will write about not only their own research and creative production but also the programs in which they are teaching or working.  

Technologies are shifting so quickly and our list-serv echoes much of the changing topics that have revolved around them from making and do it yourself to very highly theorized conceptual ideas that resonate.  

Thanks Alan and again sending good vibes your way. 
Renate and the rest of –empyre-

Renate Ferro
Visiting Associate Professor
Director of Undergraduate Studies
Department of Art

 

On 5/1/19, 4:35 PM, "empyre-bounces at lists.artdesign.unsw.edu.au on behalf of Alan Sondheim" <empyre-bounces at lists.artdesign.unsw.edu.au on behalf of sondheim at panix.com> wrote:

    ----------empyre- soft-skinned space----------------------
    
    
    My current work has been broad-ranging. I talked at Haverford College 
    about the 1889 Johnstown Flood in Pennsylvania, where 2209 died, and the 
    railroad bridge piece I did there a few years ago. But I also talked about 
    anthracite mine disasters - I'm from the state - which resulted in tens of 
    thousands of deaths, if not more than a hundred thousand, as a result of 
    accidents (not including black lung and other issues) - how this happened, 
    and why anthracite mining has basically stopped in the area, as the result 
    of the Knox Coal Mine disaster in 1959, where the Susquehanna flooded the 
    mines and twelve miners died. (The mines are all interconnected under- 
    ground.) Azure and I went back to the area before the talk, and revisited 
    the Laurel Run mine fire as well, which began in 1915 and is still burning 
    underground; we took numerous stills and videos.
    
    I've also been working on a long piece, mainly writing, dealing with the 
    idea of failure, inadequacy, and so forth, as fundamental to our condition 
    both as human animals and as an ecological-philosophical mainstay. This is 
    something I've been thinking about for a long time - the incomplete, the 
    ineffable as nothing more than an open set constructed in the aegis of a 
    postulated beyond, etc. etc.
    
    The tape Kathy Acker and I together decades ago keeps getting shown, now 
    at the London ICA, and I found the second tape we did together which has 
    just been remastered. I'm not altogether happy with the attention, but 
    it's led to discussion about sexuality and the social, etc., that have 
    been interesting to me; some of it's being published by others.
    
    I continue to do music; a new cd, Future Speed Future, just came out from 
    Public Eyesore in California - it's based on speed playing (not rock or 
    heavy metal etc.) that at this point involves both over-hand and under- 
    hand left-hand work. This may sound absurd, but I'm involved in speed as a 
    result of having to rethink music for me, from the ground up - how can 
    flurries of notes lead to, or break from, structure? I find I'm thinking 
    mainly about the guitar in very different ways as a result. A second cd 
    will be coming out from ESP, more straightforward improvisation with Henry 
    Warwick, and with Azure's songs and singing featured.
    
    Also I've been working on the idea, first published in 2600 a year ago, on 
    'splatter semiotics' which stems from my thinking through game- space, 
    edgespace, blankspace - this again is based on fast-forward speed, a way 
    of running through semiosis where semiosis breaks down as a result of 
    information overruns.
    
    Maria Damon and I continue to work on texts which ripple through wild 
    thinking, codework, and etymologies.
    
    There are venues coming up in New York and London at the moment, which are 
    wonderful; we're playing at Greenwich House as part of Stephen Dydo's 
    concerting, this Friday night.
    
    And finally, I continue to battle depression and anxiety, which have 
    gripped me ever since we moved to Rhode Island five years ago. We're not 
    welcomed in this state, and it makes day-to-day existence difficult. I 
    keep going and Azure helps tremendously.
    
    I appreciate this list tremendously; I've participated in it heavily at 
    times. At the moment, I'm more or less silent, and the subjects of the 
    work I'm doing or dealing with are uncomfortable. Thank you so much for 
    empyre!
    _______________________________________________
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