Three-day event marks a decade of Experimental Media and Performing Arts at Rensselaer
September 28, 2018
The Curtis R. Priem Experimental Media and Performing Arts Center at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (EMPAC) will celebrate a decade of adventurous programming at the intersection of art, science, and technology, October 11-13, 2018. The celebration, 10 YEARS, will commemorate the opening of the landmark performing-arts/research center in 2008. Over the past decade EMPAC has commissioned, produced, and presented an internationally renowned lineup of cross-genre performances. The events will include newly commissioned productions by artists Maria Hassabi, Isabelle Pauwels, Yara Travieso, Wu Tsang and boychild, as well as performances by Formosa Quartet, International Contemporary Ensemble, Trajal Harrell, and more.
Hailed by The New York Times as “the concert hall of the 21st century” upon its opening in October 2008, EMPAC is widely regarded as the country’s most technologically advanced performing arts center and serves as a model for new initiatives, centers and institutions around the globe. An icon of “The New Polytechnic,” Rensselaer’s pioneering vision of transdisciplinary education and research, EMPAC was designed by the London-based architecture firm Grimshaw, and supports the development of projects that bridge the traditional domains of art and science, using immersive media technologies to explore the ever-changing relationship between our human senses, technology, and the worlds we create around us.
In its first decade, EMPAC has commissioned more than 100 time-based artworks across the disciplines of music, dance, theater, visual arts, and moving image, has presented over 600 cross-genre productions, logged over 4000 days of research and artist residencies, and developed pioneering experimental media technologies. Projects developed at EMPAC have gone on to tour internationally and have garnered a host of awards including a Pulitzer Prize nomination for Kate Soper’s Ipsa Dixit and Oscar short-list selection for Laurie Anderson’s Heart of a Dog. Looking to the future, 10 YEARS celebrates these achievements with three days of exceptional new performances, installations, and screenings.
The celebration will include presentations of cross-disciplinary research at EMPAC, demonstrating technologies such as the Wave Field Synthesis 3D audio system developed by EMPAC engineers, and highlighting the work of CISL / Cognitive and Immersive Systems Laboratory, a joint research venture between Rensselaer and IBM developing new human-scale computer interfaces integrating AI with human group interactions.
10 YEARS will feature world premieres of several new performances developed at and for the EMPAC venues. The schedule of events is as follows:
Thursday, October 11
Formosa Quartet
10YEARS Opening Performance
7PM
http://empac.rpi.edu/events/2018/fall/10years/formosa-quartet
Kicking off EMPAC’s 10YEARS Celebration, Formosa Quartet lead their audience on a musical journey through all four EMPAC performance venues, playing classical repertoire selected to match the unique architectural acoustics of each space.
Friday, October 12
Exploring 3D Sound with the EMPAC Wave Field Synthesis Array
12PM-11:30PM (Fri-Sat)
Guests of the 10YEARS Celebration are invited to explore an interactive sound installation using EMPAC’s Wave Field Synthesis array. One of the most extensive systems of its kind in the world, the array’s 500 tiny speakers create the sonic equivalent of 3D cinema.
SlowMeDown
By Maria Hassabi
12PM-11:30PM (Fri-Sat)
http://empac.rpi.edu/events/2018/fall/10years/slow-me-down
Open throughout the 10YEARS Celebration, SlowMeDown is a moving-image installation by choreographer Maria Hassabi drawing on material from her live dance project STAGING.
If It Bleeds
By Isabelle Pauwels
7PM
http://empac.rpi.edu/events/2018/fall/10years/if-it-bleeds
Inspired by recent events in the world of Mixed Martial Arts, Isabelle Pauwel’s EMPAC-produced feature film uses the pageantry of sports entertainment to explore the grotesque and sublime spectacle that is everyday survival.
Sagittarius A.
By Yara Travieso
8PM
http://empac.rpi.edu/events/2018/fall/10years/sagittarius
Using monumental staging, experiential cinema, and sound, “world maker” Yara Travieso’s immersive theater performance stretches the parameters of the EMPAC Concert Hall and invites the audience to share in making it “breathe.”
In the Mood for Frankie
By Trajal Harrell
9:30 PM; Sat. 7 + 10:30PM
http://empac.rpi.edu/events/2018/fall/10years/mood-frankie
Choreographer Trajal Harrell’s dance trio will be performed in EMPAC’s lobby on a runway-style stage connected by a stream of swimming goldfish. The show will run three times throughout the 10YEARS event.
Saturday, October 13
Exploring 3D Sound with the EMPAC Wave Field Synthesis Array
12PM-11:30PM (Fri-Sat)
SlowMeDown
By Maria Hassabi
12PM-11:30PM (Fri-Sat)
The Cognitive and Immersive Systems Lab
Research Demonstration with Hui Su
2PM
http://empac.rpi.edu/events/2018/fall/10years/CISL
Director Hui Su will introduce the vision of CISL, the progress made by his team in a few areas of research, and several technical demonstrations such as an occupant-aware cognitive environment enabled with multimodal interactions, cognitive and immersive environments for language teaching and decision making, and immersive narrative generation.
Down the Rabbit Hole: A Time Capsule for Digital Texts, Images, and Sounds
Talk by EMPAC Director Johannes Goebel
4PM
http://empac.rpi.edu/events/2018/fall/10years/down-rabbit-hole
Digital archives depend on complex technological environments, electricity, chips, air conditioning, maintenance, and are challenged by changing hardware, operating systems, applications, and data formats. EMPAC director Johannes Goebel discusses solutions he and the EMPAC team have developed.
In the Mood for Frankie
By Trajal Harrell
7 + 10:30PM
Lost Highway Suite
By Olga Neuwirth, Performed by International Contemporary Ensemble
8PM
http://empac.rpi.edu/events/2018/fall/10years/lost-highway
Derived from her opera of the same name, composer Olga Neuwirth’s Lost Highway Suite evokes a mysterious tone and structure in a concert performance featuring the 35-member International Contemporary Ensemble and a 64-speaker Ambisonic dome built around the audience.
Sudden Rise
Moved by the Motion (Wu Tsang, boychild, and Co.)
9:30PM
http://empac.rpi.edu/events/2018/fall/10years/sudden-rise
Moving fluidly between theater, film, movement, text, and music, Sudden Rise is an ensemble performance that explores different modes of storytelling through an improvisational structure.
For more information, visit empac.rpi.edu. For press inquiries, contact Josh Potter at pottej2@rpi.edu.