Contemporary Artist Laurie Anderson Named Inaugural Distinguished Artist in Residence at EMPAC
Laurie Anderson
Image © Tim Knox
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The Curtis R. Priem Experimental Media and Performing Arts
Center (EMPAC) at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute announced
today that Laurie Anderson has been named the inaugural
distinguished artist in residence at EMPAC for a three-year
term beginning later this year.
As one of America’s foremost contemporary artists; a
persistent experimenter at the intersection of performance,
media, and technology; and an inventor of tools and
instruments, Anderson and EMPAC’s exceptional research and
production environment for adventurous new work are an ideal
match, according to EMPAC leadership. The residency provides
Anderson with wide access to space, technology, and support for
creative experimentation, but just as important, brings the
artist into ongoing dialogue with students and faculty at the
nation’s oldest technological university.
The residency is project-based and will include at least one
public or student event and related workshops each semester
over the next three years.
Anderson first came to EMPAC as a resident artist in 2009 to
complete work on Delusion, a complex series of stories
about longing, memory, and identity commissioned by the
Vancouver 2010 Cultural Olympiad. At EMPAC, she found the ideal
working environment to try new ideas and integrate the diverse,
multidisciplinary elements of the work -- including music,
visuals, altered voices, and electronic puppetry. Based on the
success of the extensive working relationship between Anderson
and EMPAC, Time-Based Arts Curator Kathleen Forde and EMPAC
Director Johannes Goebel proposed this new opportunity.
"It's such a great honor to be the first EMPAC distinguished
artist-in-residence,” said Anderson. “Working with the crack
technical and production teams and having access to EMPAC's
spectacular spaces and resources is such a dream. I'm
incredibly grateful for this opportunity."
The distinguished artist-in-residence is an expansion of
EMPAC’s extensive project-based residency program, which
supports the creation of new works and research. It marks the
first time an artist has been invited to EMPAC for an extended
time unrelated to a specific project, with the express goal of
sharing the artist’s creative practice with a
technology-focused campus and the community through lectures,
work-in-progress demonstrations, web documentation, workshops,
and more. Goebel sees a unique opportunity in this
collaboration: “With EMPAC, Rensselaer has made an incredible
commitment to bridge new technology with new artistic
development and to bring together the engineering and
scientific world with the experiential and creative approaches
of the arts. Laurie Anderson will bring her deeply rooted
experience in using technological tools in her artistic work to
the campus community.”
Since 2005, EMPAC has provided residences to more than 100
projects with over 400 participating artists, both established
and emerging, creating ambitious experimental, time-based work
that crosses artistic disciplines and often intersects with the
sciences and humanities. Resident artists benefit from EMPAC’s
advanced facilities; expert staff in audio, video, IT, and
stage technologies; and opportunities for collaboration with
Rensselaer’s faculty and researchers. Past resident artists
have included the Wooster Group, Chris Doyle, Brent Green,
Graham Parker, Ensemble Signal, Nora Chipaumire, Wayne
McGregor/Random Dance, The OpenEnded Group, Sean Griffin,
International Contemporary Ensemble, Anti VJ, Jennifer Tipton,
and MaryAnne Amacher; among others.
About EMPAC
The Curtis R. Priem Experimental Media and Performing
Arts Center (EMPAC), founded by Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute, is an international hub for art, performance,
science, and technology—offering adventurous interdisciplinary
public events, support for artists and scholars engaged in
creative research, and the resources of a state-of-the art
facility for digital media production, research, and
performance situated on a college campus.
About Laurie
Anderson
One of America’s most renowned performance artists,
Laurie Anderson’s genre-crossing work encompasses performance,
film, music, installation, writing, photography, and sculpture.
She is widely known for her multimedia presentations and
musical recordings and has numerous major works to her credit,
including United States I-V (1983), Empty
Places (1990), Stories from the Nerve Bible
(1993), Songs and Stories for Moby Dick (1999), and
Life on a String (2001), among others. She has had
countless collaborations with an array of artists, from
Jonathan Demme and Brian Eno to Bill T. Jones and Peter
Gabriel.
Anderson has invented several technological devices for use
in her recordings and performance art shows, including voice
filters, a tape-bow violin, and a talking stick. In 2002, she
was appointed NASA’s first artist-in-residence, and she was
also part of the team that created the opening ceremony for the
2004 Olympic Games in Athens. She has published six books,
produced numerous videos, films, radio pieces, and original
scores for dance and film. In 2007, she received the
prestigious Dorothy and Lillian Gish Prize for her outstanding
contribution to the arts. She lives in New York City.
Contact:
Jason Steven Murphy
518.276.4136
murphj8@rpi.edu
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