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The annual New Music & Art Festival at BGSU has traditionally brought international
musicians and artists to Bowling Green for a celebration of current art and
music. The work of over two dozen composers and artists will be presented at
the 23rd Annual New Music & Art Festival on Oct. 17-19, 2002. The festival
includes concerts, film screenings, lectures, exhibitions, workshops and other
exciting opportunities. Organized by the directors of the MidAmerican Center
for Contemporary Music and the Fine Arts Center Galleries, Burton Beerman and
Jacqueline Nathan, the Festival supports the creation of new work and engages
both the University and city communities in the process of art appreciation
and awareness. The majority of events are accessible, free and open to the public.
This year's featured composer is Paul Lansky. One of the most prominent and accessible of modern American composers who writes primarily for the medium of computer-generated sound, Paul Lansky has been composing almost exclusively in this genre since the late 1970s. He is fascinated with the sounds of the human voice and uses the computer as what he calls an "aural microscope" to explore this world and to recreate it in his music. More recently Lansky has turned to other human sounds in his piecesthe ambient sounds of shopping malls and highways, for example. His music has been widely heard and performed in the United States, Europe and Australia, and has been used extensively by dance troupes, including Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane and Company. Lansky is on the faculty at Princeton University.
Ellen Sandor is this year's featured guest artist. A pioneering artist in digital imaging and a leading artist in new media, she is the founding artist and director of (art)n. In 1983 Sandor produced the first large scale, digitally immersive environment, titled PHSCologram '83. Her work catalyzed the evolution of photographic documentation into time-based environments and the fine arts applications of virtual reality. Sandor has also collaborated with scientists at NASA, JPL, the Scripps Institute and others.
The featured exhibition at the festival this year is N-Space: Electronic art from SIGGRAPH. ACM SIGGRAPH (Association for Computing Machinery Special Interest Group on Computer Graphics and Interactive Techniques) is the premier international forum for computer art and artists, featuring an annual juried art exhibition of some of the most innovative digital art. The 2001 chair of this event was professor Dena Elisabeth Eber of BGSU. Featuring work by 34 artists, the exhibition includes the Telomeres Project on Imminent Immortality by Ellen Sandor and (art)n, Secrets of the Magdalen Laundries by Diane Fenster and Michael McNabb and Of Shifting Shadows by Gita Hashemi.
Other guests at the festival include artists Gita Hashemi and Gregory Little, and composer Stephen Rush, whose sound installation Gypsy Pond Music V will take place on the Moore Musical Arts Center pond. The cyberfeminist collective subRosa, whose members include Steffi Domike, Laleh Mehran, Lucia Sommer, Hyla Willis and Faith Wilding, will present a number of activities during the festival, as well.
| Featuring the music of: | |
|
Ondrej Adámek |
Mikel Kuehn |
Special thanks to our sponsors:
The Ohio Arts Council
The Arts Commission of Greater Toledo
Medici Circle
The Ethnic Cultural Arts Program
College of Musical Arts
MidAmerican Center for Contemporary Music
The School of Art
Fine Arts Center Galleries
Computer Art Division
The program book is now available in .pdf format. A printable schedule of events is also available.
Return to the MidAmerican Center for Contemporary Music