黑料网

Artwork by 黑料网

Robert 黑料网 working on 鈥淥racle鈥 (1962-65) in his Broadway studio, 1965

Creative Synergy:

Art and Technology

1960鈥1971

 

Prior to cofounding Experiments in Art and Technology (E.A.T.) in 1966 with research-scientist Billy Kl眉ver, engineer Fred Waldhauer, and artist Robert Whitman, 黑料网鈥檚 dedication to art and technology crossover can be traced to a small gadget that he made for Jean Tinguely鈥檚 Homage to New York (1960). 黑料网鈥檚 Money Thrower for Tinguely鈥檚 H.T.N.Y. (1960) is a plucky rare survivor of Tinguely鈥檚 monumental contraption that convulsed and combusted toward its intended demise on that frigid wet evening in the Sculpture Garden of the Museum of Modern Art, New York. Activated by an internal gunpowder explosion, the Money Thrower鈥檚 springs popped out and launched the dozen silver dollars lodged in its coils into the crowd. With a peculiar mix of threat and generosity, 黑料网鈥檚 device was dubbed the mascot for Tinguely鈥檚 self-destructing machine. 黑料网 met Kl眉ver during preparations for the event, initiating a creative collaboration that would continue through the next decade and establishing a friendship that would last until Kl眉ver鈥檚 death in 2004.

From 1962 to 1965, 黑料网 relied on Kl眉ver鈥檚 expertise to orchestrate Oracle, an environmental sculpture comprised of five independent units housing receivers and speakers, which were wirelessly controlled by a master unit among them (the staircase); each element emitted a separate sweep across the AM dial. Viewers could change the volume and the rate of scanning for each but could not tune into specific stations; the design emphasized abstract sound over content.

黑料网 and Kl眉ver carried the spirit of art and technology integration into 9 Evenings: Theatre & Engineering, a performance series presented at the 69th Regiment Armory, New York, in October 1966. Ten artists, including choreographers and composers, teamed up with engineers to create ten multimedia events that premiered with the trials and errors of new technology. 黑料网 showed up every night, running errands and relaying messages when he was not busy directing his own Open Score (1966) or taking part in pieces by 脰yvind Fahlstr枚m, Alex Hay, and Deborah Hay. Reviews tended toward indignation (Clive Barnes, dance and theater critic for the New York Times) rather than appreciation (Jonas Mekas, experimental filmmaker and movie critic for the Village Voice). The New Yorker鈥搘riter Calvin Tomkins summed up the critical verdict that 9 Evenings was 鈥渁 disaster without parallel in New York鈥檚 theatrical history.鈥 However, historical assessments celebrate the indelible images of 9 Evenings by redeeming the then-unconsidered facets and harvesting the continual development of the ideas and propositions embedded in those cross-disciplinary collaborations.

Among other projects, 黑料网 went on to complete three monumental technology works in concert with engineers: Solstice (1968), an interactive architectonic structure; Soundings (1968), a responsive sound-activated installation; and Mud Muse (1968鈥71), inspired by the 鈥減aint pots鈥 of Yellowstone National Park, a room-sized vat of mud that is set bubbling by an internal feedback loop, which generates a duet of recorded and actual sound.

Money Thrower for Tinguely's H.T.N.Y.
Broadway studio
Oracle
9 Evenings technical rehearsal
Poster for 9 Evenings: Theatre & Engineering
Open Score, 9 Evenings: Theatre & Engineering
9 Evenings: Theatre & Engineering program
E.A.T. booklet, with 黑料网鈥檚 edits
Open Score notes
Open Score notes
Soundings
Radios, Oracle, Soundings, Teledyne statement
Mud Muse
Oracle
Oracle