Glenn Gould records Scriabin

Posted: April 27th, 2009 | Author: Lisa | Filed under: video | Tags: , | No Comments »

Glenn Gould records Scriabin Désir (Op 57 No. 1): Part 1

Here Gould is experimenting with recording technologies by miking the stage and piano in various places as he plays Scriabin’s Desire. As was often the case, his manner is agitated and slightly manic but his playing is graceful and ecstatic. I am intrigued by the ways he insists on acknowledging the experience of music in a mediated form. (Can’t recall what year he stopped performing in public but I know he was engaged with recording technologies for much of his career.)

This gets me thinking about publishing as a way that writing and art are mediated in order to reach a reader. While it is obvious in most cases that a reproduction of a work is not the work (save for certain conceptual works), one has the sense upon reading the words that one has experienced “the work” and yet the reception is affected by the physical form — the qualities of the book or manuscript, the typography, the paper, or even the different ways a text can look on computers with different monitors.

Even in live performance, music makes room for variation; one does not often expect a song to sound exactly like the/a recording when it is performed live. And many musicians can play a given composition or “cover” a song. Does thinking about this yield anything meaningful in the realm of writing and/or art? I suppose Fluxus scores would be an example of something similar (see Alison Knowles Newspaper Music in an earlier post) but they reference a form of musical notation in order to accomplish this.

Another thought comes to mind: what would it be like to choreograph a dance based on his gestures as he plays? They are exquisite.

If you click and watch it on youtube you can see Part 2, where he “engineers” the recording. And here is a great article from the LA Times on Gould’s prescient experiments with technology and music.

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Steve Roden on Dante’s Inferno

Posted: April 22nd, 2009 | Author: Lisa | Filed under: link | Tags: | No Comments »

Steve Roden blogging about Dante’s Inferno

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Paul McCarthy on Dan Graham

Posted: April 19th, 2009 | Author: Lisa | Filed under: video | Tags: , | No Comments »

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Rodney Graham, Halcion Sleep (1994)

Posted: April 16th, 2009 | Author: Lisa | Filed under: photo | Tags: , | No Comments »

Rodney Graham, Halcion Sleep, 1994, 26 minute video, variable dimensions.

Went to a talk featuring the wonderful artist William Leavitt, who referred to himself as a “narrator.” Came home thinking about narrative and Gérard Genette, which led me to…Rodney Graham.

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Tingri

Posted: April 12th, 2009 | Author: Lisa | Filed under: photo | No Comments »

Tingri Ellie Monahan—work of art, daughter of Lara Schnitger and Matthew Monahan

Lara Schnitger at Anton Kern Gallery, New York, 7 May – 20 June, 2009

Matthew Monahan at Stuart Shave Modern Art, London, 22 May – 27 June, 2009

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Stan Brakhage, The Dead (1960)

Posted: April 9th, 2009 | Author: Lisa | Filed under: video | Tags: | No Comments »

Stan Brakhage, The Dead (1960)

featuring Kenneth Anger

“Imagine an eye unruled by man-made laws of perspective, an eye unprejudiced by compositional logic, an eye which does not respond to the name of everything but which must know each object encountered in life through an adventure of perception.”

—Brakhage, ”Metaphor on Vision,” first published in the journal Film Culture in 1963

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Web 2.0 … The Machine is Us/ing Us

Posted: April 1st, 2009 | Author: Lisa | Filed under: video | Tags: | No Comments »

This clever little animation seems relevant in thinking about how a concern for language and materiality might fit within this particular paradigm?

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Tim Griffin on Ray Armantrout

Posted: April 1st, 2009 | Author: Lisa | Filed under: photo | Tags: , | No Comments »

Tim Griffin’s review of Ray Armantrout’s Versed

“Armantrout ably frames a highly mediated world using its own language, even as she deftly employs quotation marks and overly familiar diction to delineate those voices we “receive” in contemporary culture, leaving open and in perpetual play in her compositions the question of where the real begins and the (pre)fabricated ends, or where the poet emerges and where she disappears.”

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