Meredith Danluck: Andrew Kreps Gallery.Two arty scientists served as inspirations for this exhibition. One, Robert Moog Dr. Robert Arthur Moog (pronounced IPA: /ˈmoʊɡ/ to rhyme with "vogue") (May 23, 1934 – August 21, 2005) was a pioneer of electronic music, best known as the inventor of the Moog synthesizer. , designed electronic music synthesizers and uttered the words that served as an epigraph ep·i·graph n. 1. An inscription, as on a statue or building. 2. A motto or quotation, as at the beginning of a literary composition, setting forth a theme. for the show: "Musical instruments provide the most efficient and refined interface between man and machine of anything we know." The other, Buckminster Fuller, was a multidisciplinary inventor and practical philosopher best known for developing the light, strong, and cost-efficient geodesic dome geodesic dome (jē'ədĕs`ĭk, –dē`sĭk), structure that roughly approximates a hemisphere. Popular in recent years as economical, easily erected buildings, geodesic domes are geometrically determined from a model and may . A formal geometry--fundamental to both the geodesic dome and the mathematically generated sound waves of the analog synthesizer--underlies Meredith Danluck's array of objects, which worked together so beautifully it was hard to imagine any one element succeeding on its own. Toward Thee Infinite Beat (all works 2003), which takes its name from a Psychic TV This article is about the music group. For other uses, see PTV. Psychic TV (sometimes spelt Psychick TV) or PTV, is a video art and music group that primarily performs psychedelic, punk, electronic and experimental music. album, was a large MDF (1) (Main Distribution Frame) A wiring rack that connects outside lines with internal lines. It is used to connect public or private lines coming into the building to internal networks. sculpture at the center of the gallery that approximated an exploded section of a geodesic dome. On the walls, three "Energy Paintings" recalled Abstract Expressionism--specifically the angular lines of Hans Hofmann--with their grayscale In computing, a grayscale or greyscale digital image is an image in which the value of each pixel is a single sample. Displayed images of this sort are typically composed of shades of gray, varying from black at the weakest intensity to white at the strongest, though in palette and slashing brushstrokes. Rogue Rogue, a Moog Rogue synthesizer synthesizer Machine that electronically generates and modifies sounds, frequently with the use of a digital computer, for use in the composition of electronic music and in live performance. (the economy version of Moog's Prodigy) internally reconfigured so that players had to unlearn any previous keyboard knowledge to make music, was sitting ready for experimentation on the gallery floor. Finally, Circle Machine, which takes its title from a midcentury analog waveform generator, is a video montage of musicians and breakdancers and played on a small monitor virtually at floor level. Fuller and Moog were Americans of a particular era and ethos, symbols of their country's postwar reverence for technology while intellectually engaged with the fallout of European modernism (for Fuller, the International Style; for Moog, Varese, Stockhausen, and Xenakis). Both were artists (one an architect, one a musician) and scientists, driven toward practical applications for their inventions. And both moved relatively freely between mainstream culture and advanced, technology-based aesthetics. Danluck herself is multidisciplinary. She's made art, clothes, and music and performs as a DJ. In this exhibition, she threaded together a particular set of American ideas: our characteristic discomfort with art, which does not generally demonstrate its practicality, and our fetishism fetishism, in psychiatry, a paraphilia (see perversion, sexual) in which erotic interest and satisfaction are centered on an inanimate object or a specific, nongenital part of the anatomy. Generally occurring in males, fetishism frequently centers on a garment (e.g. of technological "know-how." Unraveling the Rogue, dismantling the geodesic dome, and slashing her way through late-modernist abstraction, Danluck paid tribute to Moog's and Fuller's projects while admiringly taking them apart. She also made a case for how, in America, science has often been a fitting, even indispensable, ally of art.--MS |
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