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| DATE: |
February
20, 2004 |
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| FOR RELEASE: |
Immediate |
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| CONTACT: |
contact |
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The
New New Thing
On
NJN's State of the Arts
Sunday,
March 7 at 6 pm
STATEWIDE
- This month, NJN's State of the Arts takes
on the newest of the new with a look at Trenton's George Antheil,
the "Theremin", the avant-garde at Rutgers, Internet
art at Bell Labs and The Tank, a space for performing and
visual arts in Manhattan. The program airs Sunday, March 7
at 6 pm; Tuesday, March 9 at 6:30 pm; Friday, March 19 at
8:30 pm; and Sunday, March 28 at 12 Midnight,
In the art world,
the search is always on for "the new new thing."
In 1924, composer George Antheil's Ballet Mécanique
created uproar in Paris. In 1933, RCA began production of
a sci-fi instrument called the Theremin. In 1957, artists
in New Brunswick created the first "happenings."
In 1992, the internet was the new medium for artists. Now
in 2004, e-mails and Game Boys are the stuff of art and music.
From today's New York gallery scene to Paris in the 20s, State
of the Arts takes a look at 100 years of art on the
cutting edge.
The Bad Boy
of Music - Born in Trenton, NJ, in 1900, George Antheil
was a musical genius, concert pianist, and avant-garde composer.
In the teens and twenties he was the new new thing in classical
music, famous for his mechanically-inspired works: the "Airplane
Sonata," the "Ballet Mecanique," and the "Death
of Machines." Antheil lived in Paris where he was embraced
by the moderns, Ezra Pound, Gertrude Stein, James Joyce, and
Erik Satie. His colorful autobiography is called "Bad
Boy of Music." Performances by the Composers Guild of
New Jersey are featured.
Music from the
Ether - Imagine a musical instrument that you play without
touching - that was the sales pitch for the Theremin, an eerie
sounding device invented by a Soviet musician/scientist (who
went on to create secret listening devices for the KGB). It
was the new new thing and many people - including RCA, which
built 500 of the contraptions back in the 1930s - thought
it would be the next big thing. The Theremin never really
took off except as an oddity - you hear it in old sci-fi movie
soundtracks - in part because it's almost impossible to play
well. But there are still a few Theremin aficionados out there
- among them, Scott Marshall of East Windsor, who built his
own Theremin, taught himself to play it, and is a passionate
student of its history. On the next State of the Arts,
Marshall gives us a Theremin demonstration and walks us through
the strange world of Music from the Ether.
The Rutgers
Avant-Garde - Rutgers University was a hotbed of the avant-garde
during the years 1957-1963 with some of the first "happenings"
taking place. State of the Arts takes a look
at this special time through rare archival film and interviews
with the now famous artists who participated including George
Segal, Allan Kaprow and Lucas Samaras.
Internet Art
- The beginnings of computer and web-based art can be traced
to early experiments at Bell Labs in Murray Hill, New Jersey.
State of the Arts explores the conditions that
allowed the new art form of the 1990s to flourish in a science
lab, and talks to artists who use the internet as their medium.
The Tank
- From performances that explore the Nintendo Game Boy as
a musical instrument to presenting holiday shows like A Very
Merry Unauthorized Children's Scientology Pageant, The Tank,
a space for performing and visual arts in Manhattan, has provided
up-and-coming artists and very experimental art forms with
a new home. Co-founded by New Jersey natives Justin Krebs
and Daniel Greenfeld, along with a small community of creative
twenty-somethings, The Tank is dedicated to new work by emerging
performers, designers, writers, directors and producers as
well as keeping ticket prices between "free" and
ten dollars. One artist who has been performing at The Tank
since its kick-off show is Bit Shifter (aka Josh Davis), whose
stage performance consists of two Nintendo Game Boys. State
of the Arts paid Bit Shifter a visit at his home in
Astoria, Queens to get the scoop on one of the newest musical
trends on the planet. Style guru and former Sex Pistols manager
Malcolm McLaren calls it the "humanization of electronic
music . . . the beginning of the look and sound of 21st-century
pop culture."
Funding for State
of the Arts is provided by the New Jersey State Council
on the Arts and the Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation. The series
producer is Susan Wallner and the executive producer is Nila
Aronow.
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