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Steina and Woody Vasulka

Steina Vasulka (born Steinunn Briem Bjarnadottir in 1940)[1] and Woody Vasulka (born Bohuslav Vašulka on 20 January 1937[2] – 20 December 2019[3]) are early pioneers of video art, and have been producing work since the early 1960s.[4] The couple met in the early 1960s and moved to New York City in 1965, where they began showing video art at the Whitney Museum and founded The Kitchen in 1971. Steina and Woody both became Guggenheim fellows: Steina in 1976, and Woody in 1979.[1]

Woody Vasulka (left)
Steina Vasulka (right)

Early life and education edit

Steina Vasulka was born in Reykjavík, Iceland and trained as a classical musician and violinist and was a member of the Iceland Symphony Orchestra. Steina received a scholarship at the Prague Conservatory in 1959.

Woody Vasulka was born in Brno, now in the Czech Republic and trained as an engineer before studying television and film production at the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague. While pursuing his studies in the fifties, Woody Vasulka wrote poetry and produced short films. The pair met in Prague in the early 1960s, where Woody introduced video to Steina.[5]

New York / The Kitchen edit

For the first few years following their relocation to in New York, the Vasulkas were not involved with the local art scene; Steina continued to practice as a violinist and Woody began making independent documentaries and edited industrial films at Harvey Lloyd Productions.[6][7] In 1967, at the request of architects Woods and Ramirez, Woody collaborated on developing films designed for a multi-screen environment to be shown in the American Pavilion at Expo 67 in Montreal. In 1968, Woody conducted his first experiments with images made with electronics and put aside the cinematographic form in favor of video. Steina was experimenting with video at the same time as Woody, with equipment that the couple had borrowed from Lloyd. Over time, the Vasulkas became more closely involved with the artistic communities around them and the emerging fascination with video and new-media, and grew more dedicated to their developing video art practice until they made it their shared full-time occupation.[8]

On December 31, 1969 and January 1, 1970 Woody Valsulka video recorded Jimi Hendrix performing with Band of Gypsys at the Fillmore East in NYC. The recordings are included on a DVD included in a CD release of the concerts. (Source: Live at the Fillmore DVD released 1999, released again 2012)

In 1971, the Vasulkas founded The Kitchen, a multi-use media theater located in the kitchen of the Mercer Arts Center in Grand Central Hotel, Greenwich Village, in the interest of cultivating new-media art in an inclusive, comprehensive, and un-administrative context. Under the direction of Dimitri Devyatkin, and with help from Andy Mannik, Sia and Michael Tschudin, Rhys Chatham, and Shridhar Bapat, the space received a grant from the New York State Council on the Arts and expanded its programming, which was foregrounded by video and electronic media performance and would come to include new music programming under the direction of Rhys Chatham.[9] The Kitchen would relocate following the collapse of the Mercer Arts Centre, but maintain its mission.

The Kitchen was valuable space for a number of music, performance, and media artists in New York who at the time did not feel welcome in commercial galleries or the mainstream art-world.[10][11] The Vasulkas' programming for The Kitchen provided the space to a number video artists who would become prominent, including Joan Jonas, Nancy Holt, Vito Acconci, Mary Lucier, Dara Birnbaum, Bill Viola, and Gary Hill.[12]

Work edit

 
Steina Vasulka speaking about her work in 2011

The work that the Vasulkas presented at The Kitchen's original Greenwich Village location, which amounted to a handful of performances and showings each month, included a range of live documentary and experimental videos, live video performances, live video processing, media installations, and “experiments in perception.”[13]

The Vasulkas' work at this time was colored by the artists' interest in negotiating terms like "space" in the context of video and what Yvonne Spielman calls video's "image object." The Vasulkas' wide exploration of video in this ontological regard led to apparent contrast, such as that between the documentary-style Participation series involving footage of real-life performances (occurring in the space in front of and around the video camera), and works like Caligrams, in which the Vasulkas use hardware devices such as scan processors, video sequencers, and multikeyers to "play" or perform with video like a musical instrument, and in a different kind of space.

In 1974, The Vasulkas moved to Buffalo, New York to pursue a faculty position at the State University of New York's Department of Media Studies, though they would maintain involvement with The Kitchen and its programming. Though Steina and Woody had worked outside their duo before, their practices diverged to a greater extent following this relocation. Woody's practice became more focused on digital image manipulation and the employment of tools like the Rutt/Etra Video Synthesizer (Bill Etra, a co-creator of this device, showed frequently at the Kitchen during the Vasulkas' tenure). Steina's practice centered around environmental, mechanical, and physical relationships between body, video, and camera, beginning with a late-1970s series of moving-camera environments titled All Vision and Machine Vision which were shown, in part, at The Kitchen.

The Vasulkas have collaborated with Harald Bode (posthumously).[14]

The Vasulka Chamber edit

 
Woody Vasulka in 2013

In 2014, The National Gallery of Iceland opened the Vasulka Chamber, a collaboration between the museum and the artist couple. They donated a substantial amount of their digital archive to the museum and it is the Chamber's aim to preserve the legacy and collection of the artists.[15]

The Vasulka Archive edit

In 2016 the Vašulka Kitchen Brno (VKB) was established in Brno in The Czech Republic, for research, artistic experiment and informal education in the field of new media art. It consists of the archive of Woody and Steina Vašulkas’ work and a permanent exhibition of their selected works.[16]

Gallery representation edit

The Vasulkas are represented by commercial art gallery BERG Contemporary.[17][18]

Selected works edit

Complete and existing videotapes by Steina and Woody Vasulka include:[19]

1969–71

  • Participation, 60 min., b/w

1970

  • Adagio, 10 min., color
  • Calligrams, 12 min., b/w
  • Decay #1, 7 min., color
  • Decay #2, 7 min., b/w
  • Don Cherry, 12 min., b/w (in collaboration with Elaine Milosh)
  • Evolution, 16 min
  • Interface, 3:30 min., b/w
  • Jackie Curtis' First Television Special, 45 min., b/w
  • Sexmachine, 6 min., b/w
  • Sketches, 27 min., b/w
  • Tissues, 6min., b/w

1970-78

  • Violin Power, video, 10:04 min., b/w, sound (by Steina Vasulka) [20]

1971

  • Black Sunrise, 21 min., color
  • Contrapoint, 3 min., b/w
  • Discs, 6 min., b/w
  • Elements, 9 min., color
  • Keysnow, 12 min., color
  • Shapes, 13 min., b/w
  • Swan Lake, 7 min., b/w

1972

  • Distant Activities, 6 min., color
  • Soundprints, endless loops, color
  • Spaces 1, 15 min., b/w
  • Spaces 2, 15 min., b/w

1973

  • Golden Voyage, 28 min., color
  • Home, 16 min., color
  • Vocabulary, 5 min., color

1974

  • 1-2-3-4, 8 min., color
  • Heraldic View, 5 min., color
  • Noisefields, 13 min., color
  • Solo For 3, 5 min., color
  • Soundgated Images, 10 min., color
  • Soundsize, 5 min., color
  • Telc, 5 min., color

1979

  • Six Programs for Television: Matrix, Vocabulary, Transformations, Object, Steina, Digital Images, 174 min., total (29 min. each), color

1981

  • In Search of the Castle, 12 min., color
  • Progeny, 19 min., color (in collaboration with Bradford Smith)

1983

  • The West, color

1984

  • Pariah, color

1989

  • In the Land of the Elevator Girls, color

References edit

  1. ^ a b Steina & Woody Vasulka Soros Center for Contemporary Arts Budapest
  2. ^ Foundation, John Simon Guggenheim Memorial (Dec 22, 1979). "Reports of the President and the Treasurer". John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Retrieved Dec 22, 2019 – via Google Books.
  3. ^ Greenberger, Alex (Dec 21, 2019). "Woody Vasulka, Imaginative Filmmaker Who Inspired Generations of Video Artists, Is Dead at 82". Retrieved Dec 22, 2019.
  4. ^ "Steina and Woody Vasulka fonds : Steina and Woody Vasulka fonds". www.fondation-langlois.org. Retrieved Dec 22, 2019.
  5. ^ Vasulka, Steina (1995). "My Love Affair with Art: Video and Installation Work". Leonardo. 28 (1): 15–18. doi:10.2307/1576147. JSTOR 1576147. S2CID 193245143.
  6. ^ "Modular video matrix" (PDF). Radical Software. 2 (5): 18–19. Winter 1973. Retrieved 11 December 2022. Video and Environment
  7. ^ "Trend". The New Yorker. 6 December 1969. Retrieved 11 December 2022.
  8. ^ "Notes Toward a History of Image-processed Video – Steina and Woody Vasulka" (PDF). Afterimage: 12–17. December 1983.
  9. ^ "The Kitchen" (PDF). Vasulka.org.
  10. ^ "History and Purpose" (PDF). Vasulka.org.
  11. ^ "Open Circuits: The New Video Abstractionists". Vasulka.org.
  12. ^ "Archive – 1970s". The Kitchen.
  13. ^ "Electric Arts Intermix, Inc" (PDF). Vasulka.org.
  14. ^ "Various - Bode Sound Project". Discogs. Retrieved Dec 22, 2019.
  15. ^ "Vasulka Chamber".
  16. ^ "Vašulka Kitchen Brno". vasulkakitchen.org. Vašulka Kitchen Brno. Retrieved 2019-09-26.
  17. ^ "Berg Contemporary".
  18. ^ "Berg Contemporary".
  19. ^ Riley, Robert R. (1996). Machine Media. San Francisco, California: San Francisco Museum of Art. p. 76.
  20. ^ "Online Gallery - Watch This! Revelations in Media Art | Smithsonian American Art Museum". americanart.si.edu. Retrieved 2015-07-25.
  • Furlong, Linda (1985). "Tracking Video Art: "Image Processing" as a Genre". Art Journal. 45 (3): 233–237. doi:10.1080/00043249.1985.10792303.
  • Dietrich, Frank (1987). "The Computer: A Tool for Thought-Experiments". Leonardo. 20 (4): 315–325. doi:10.2307/1578526. JSTOR 1578526. S2CID 96440151.

External links edit

  • Steina Vasulka at IMDb
  • Woody Vasulka at IMDb
  • Vasulkas' web-presence
  • Steina and Woody Vasulka in the
  • Steina and Woody Vasulka portfolio at Imai
  • Tools Thomas Dreher: History of Computer Art Chap. IV.1.2 Video Synthesizers.
  • Switch! Monitor! Drift! (3:45) (1976) on UbuWeb
  • The Kitchen: Steina and Woody Vasulka

steina, woody, vasulka, steina, vasulka, born, steinunn, briem, bjarnadottir, 1940, woody, vasulka, born, bohuslav, vašulka, january, 1937, december, 2019, early, pioneers, video, have, been, producing, work, since, early, 1960s, couple, early, 1960s, moved, y. Steina Vasulka born Steinunn Briem Bjarnadottir in 1940 1 and Woody Vasulka born Bohuslav Vasulka on 20 January 1937 2 20 December 2019 3 are early pioneers of video art and have been producing work since the early 1960s 4 The couple met in the early 1960s and moved to New York City in 1965 where they began showing video art at the Whitney Museum and founded The Kitchen in 1971 Steina and Woody both became Guggenheim fellows Steina in 1976 and Woody in 1979 1 Woody Vasulka left Steina Vasulka right Contents 1 Early life and education 2 New York The Kitchen 3 Work 4 The Vasulka Chamber 5 The Vasulka Archive 6 Gallery representation 7 Selected works 8 References 9 External linksEarly life and education editSteina Vasulka was born in Reykjavik Iceland and trained as a classical musician and violinist and was a member of the Iceland Symphony Orchestra Steina received a scholarship at the Prague Conservatory in 1959 Woody Vasulka was born in Brno now in the Czech Republic and trained as an engineer before studying television and film production at the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague While pursuing his studies in the fifties Woody Vasulka wrote poetry and produced short films The pair met in Prague in the early 1960s where Woody introduced video to Steina 5 New York The Kitchen editFor the first few years following their relocation to in New York the Vasulkas were not involved with the local art scene Steina continued to practice as a violinist and Woody began making independent documentaries and edited industrial films at Harvey Lloyd Productions 6 7 In 1967 at the request of architects Woods and Ramirez Woody collaborated on developing films designed for a multi screen environment to be shown in the American Pavilion at Expo 67 in Montreal In 1968 Woody conducted his first experiments with images made with electronics and put aside the cinematographic form in favor of video Steina was experimenting with video at the same time as Woody with equipment that the couple had borrowed from Lloyd Over time the Vasulkas became more closely involved with the artistic communities around them and the emerging fascination with video and new media and grew more dedicated to their developing video art practice until they made it their shared full time occupation 8 On December 31 1969 and January 1 1970 Woody Valsulka video recorded Jimi Hendrix performing with Band of Gypsys at the Fillmore East in NYC The recordings are included on a DVD included in a CD release of the concerts Source Live at the Fillmore DVD released 1999 released again 2012 In 1971 the Vasulkas founded The Kitchen a multi use media theater located in the kitchen of the Mercer Arts Center in Grand Central Hotel Greenwich Village in the interest of cultivating new media art in an inclusive comprehensive and un administrative context Under the direction of Dimitri Devyatkin and with help from Andy Mannik Sia and Michael Tschudin Rhys Chatham and Shridhar Bapat the space received a grant from the New York State Council on the Arts and expanded its programming which was foregrounded by video and electronic media performance and would come to include new music programming under the direction of Rhys Chatham 9 The Kitchen would relocate following the collapse of the Mercer Arts Centre but maintain its mission The Kitchen was valuable space for a number of music performance and media artists in New York who at the time did not feel welcome in commercial galleries or the mainstream art world 10 11 The Vasulkas programming for The Kitchen provided the space to a number video artists who would become prominent including Joan Jonas Nancy Holt Vito Acconci Mary Lucier Dara Birnbaum Bill Viola and Gary Hill 12 Work edit nbsp Steina Vasulka speaking about her work in 2011The work that the Vasulkas presented at The Kitchen s original Greenwich Village location which amounted to a handful of performances and showings each month included a range of live documentary and experimental videos live video performances live video processing media installations and experiments in perception 13 The Vasulkas work at this time was colored by the artists interest in negotiating terms like space in the context of video and what Yvonne Spielman calls video s image object The Vasulkas wide exploration of video in this ontological regard led to apparent contrast such as that between the documentary style Participation series involving footage of real life performances occurring in the space in front of and around the video camera and works like Caligrams in which the Vasulkas use hardware devices such as scan processors video sequencers and multikeyers to play or perform with video like a musical instrument and in a different kind of space In 1974 The Vasulkas moved to Buffalo New York to pursue a faculty position at the State University of New York s Department of Media Studies though they would maintain involvement with The Kitchen and its programming Though Steina and Woody had worked outside their duo before their practices diverged to a greater extent following this relocation Woody s practice became more focused on digital image manipulation and the employment of tools like the Rutt Etra Video Synthesizer Bill Etra a co creator of this device showed frequently at the Kitchen during the Vasulkas tenure Steina s practice centered around environmental mechanical and physical relationships between body video and camera beginning with a late 1970s series of moving camera environments titled All Vision and Machine Vision which were shown in part at The Kitchen The Vasulkas have collaborated with Harald Bode posthumously 14 The Vasulka Chamber edit nbsp Woody Vasulka in 2013In 2014 The National Gallery of Iceland opened the Vasulka Chamber a collaboration between the museum and the artist couple They donated a substantial amount of their digital archive to the museum and it is the Chamber s aim to preserve the legacy and collection of the artists 15 The Vasulka Archive editIn 2016 the Vasulka Kitchen Brno VKB was established in Brno in The Czech Republic for research artistic experiment and informal education in the field of new media art It consists of the archive of Woody and Steina Vasulkas work and a permanent exhibition of their selected works 16 Gallery representation editThe Vasulkas are represented by commercial art gallery BERG Contemporary 17 18 Selected works editComplete and existing videotapes by Steina and Woody Vasulka include 19 1969 71 Participation 60 min b w1970 Adagio 10 min color Calligrams 12 min b w Decay 1 7 min color Decay 2 7 min b w Don Cherry 12 min b w in collaboration with Elaine Milosh Evolution 16 min Interface 3 30 min b w Jackie Curtis First Television Special 45 min b w Sexmachine 6 min b w Sketches 27 min b w Tissues 6min b w1970 78 Violin Power video 10 04 min b w sound by Steina Vasulka 20 1971 Black Sunrise 21 min color Contrapoint 3 min b w Discs 6 min b w Elements 9 min color Keysnow 12 min color Shapes 13 min b w Swan Lake 7 min b w1972 Distant Activities 6 min color Soundprints endless loops color Spaces 1 15 min b w Spaces 2 15 min b w1973 Golden Voyage 28 min color Home 16 min color Vocabulary 5 min color1974 1 2 3 4 8 min color Heraldic View 5 min color Noisefields 13 min color Solo For 3 5 min color Soundgated Images 10 min color Soundsize 5 min color Telc 5 min color1979 Six Programs for Television Matrix Vocabulary Transformations Object Steina Digital Images 174 min total 29 min each color1981 In Search of the Castle 12 min color Progeny 19 min color in collaboration with Bradford Smith 1983 The West color1984 Pariah color1989 In the Land of the Elevator Girls colorReferences edit a b Steina amp Woody Vasulka Soros Center for Contemporary Arts Budapest Foundation John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Dec 22 1979 Reports of the President and the Treasurer John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Retrieved Dec 22 2019 via Google Books Greenberger Alex Dec 21 2019 Woody Vasulka Imaginative Filmmaker Who Inspired Generations of Video Artists Is Dead at 82 Retrieved Dec 22 2019 Steina and Woody Vasulka fonds Steina and Woody Vasulka fonds www fondation langlois org Retrieved Dec 22 2019 Vasulka Steina 1995 My Love Affair with Art Video and Installation Work Leonardo 28 1 15 18 doi 10 2307 1576147 JSTOR 1576147 S2CID 193245143 Modular video matrix PDF Radical Software 2 5 18 19 Winter 1973 Retrieved 11 December 2022 Video and Environment Trend The New Yorker 6 December 1969 Retrieved 11 December 2022 Notes Toward a History of Image processed Video Steina and Woody Vasulka PDF Afterimage 12 17 December 1983 The Kitchen PDF Vasulka org History and Purpose PDF Vasulka org Open Circuits The New Video Abstractionists Vasulka org Archive 1970s The Kitchen Electric Arts Intermix Inc PDF Vasulka org Various Bode Sound Project Discogs Retrieved Dec 22 2019 Vasulka Chamber Vasulka Kitchen Brno vasulkakitchen org Vasulka Kitchen Brno Retrieved 2019 09 26 Berg Contemporary Berg Contemporary Riley Robert R 1996 Machine Media San Francisco California San Francisco Museum of Art p 76 Online Gallery Watch This Revelations in Media Art Smithsonian American Art Museum americanart si edu Retrieved 2015 07 25 Furlong Linda 1985 Tracking Video Art Image Processing as a Genre Art Journal 45 3 233 237 doi 10 1080 00043249 1985 10792303 Dietrich Frank 1987 The Computer A Tool for Thought Experiments Leonardo 20 4 315 325 doi 10 2307 1578526 JSTOR 1578526 S2CID 96440151 External links editSteina Vasulka at IMDb Woody Vasulka at IMDb Vasulkas web presence Steina and Woody Vasulka in the Video Data Bank Steina and Woody Vasulka Mediateca Media Art Space Video Out documentary about VJing s roots in video out and influence of Vasulkas Features interview with Steina Vasulka Steina and Woody Vasulka portfolio at Imai Tools Thomas Dreher History of Computer Art Chap IV 1 2 Video Synthesizers www listasafn is Switch Monitor Drift 3 45 1976 on UbuWeb The Kitchen Steina and Woody Vasulka Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Steina and Woody Vasulka amp oldid 1165937862, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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