We use cookies to enhance your experience on our website. By continuing to use our website, you are agreeing to our use of cookies. You can change your cookie settings at any time. Find out more

Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford. It furthers the University's objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide.

Print Price: $45.50

Format:
Paperback
256 pp.
32 photographs, 6.125" x 9.25"

ISBN-13:
9780199861422

Publication date:
April 2013

Imprint: OUP US


Sounding the Gallery

Video and the Rise of Art-Music

Holly Rogers

Series : Oxford Music/Media Series

Sounding the Gallery explores the first decade of creative video work, focusing on the ways in which video technology was used to dissolve the boundaries between art and music. Becoming commercially available in the mid 1960s, video quickly became integral to the intense experimentalism of New York City's music and art scenes. The medium was able to record image and sound at the same time, which allowed composers to visualize their music and artists to sound their images in a quick and easy manner. But video not only provided artists and composers with the opportunity to produce unprecedented forms of audiovisuality; it also allowed them to create interactive spaces that questioned conventional habits of music and art consumption. Early video's audiovisual synergy could be projected, manipulated and processed live. The closed-circuit video feed drew audience members into the heart of the audiovisual experience, from where they could influence the flow, structure and sound of the video performance. Such activated spectatorship resulted in improvisatory and performative events in which the space between artists, composers, performers and visitors collapsed into a single, yet expansive, intermedial experience.

Many believed that such audiovisual video work signalled a brand-new art form that only began in 1965. Using early video work as an example, this book suggests that this is inaccurate. During the twentieth century, composers were experimenting with spatializing their sounds, while artists were attempting to include time as a creative element in their visual work. Pioneering video work allowed these two disciplines to come together, acting as a conduit that facilitated the fusion and manipulation of pre-existing elements. Shifting the focus from object to spatial process, Sounding the Gallery uses theories of intermedia, film, architecture, drama and performance practice to create an interdisciplinary history of music and art that culminates in the rise of video art-music in the late 1960s.

Readership : Sounding the Gallery will appeal to students and scholars in film music studies and well as theorists, historians and students of cinema and experimental film, cntemporary visual art, contemporary music, sound art, acoustic ecology, 1960s counterculture, New York City creative scenes, and architecture and twentieth-century space.

Introduction
1. Composing with Technology: The Artist-Composer
2. Silent Music and Static Motion: The Audio-Visual History of Video
3. Towards the Spatial: Music, Art and the Audiovisual Environment
4. The Rise of Video Art-Music: 1963-1970
5. Interactivity, Mirrored Spaces and the Closed-Circuit Feed: Performing Video
Epilogue: Towards the Twenty First Century
Index

There are no Instructor/Student Resources available at this time.

Holly Rogers is Lecturer in Music at the University of Liverpool. She has published on a variety of audiovisual topics including music and experimental cinema, visual music and composer biopics.

Making Sense - Margot Northey and Joan McKibbin
Visionary Film - P. Adams Sitney
Playing Along - Kiri Miller
Special Sound - Louis Niebur
Listening through the Noise - Joanna Demers
An Eye for Music - John Richardson

Special Features

  • Provides a new audiovisual theory.
  • Offers the first spatial history of music and art.
  • Reconsiders methods of art exhibition and music performance.
  • Combines theories and histories of art, music, architecture, film and drama.
  • Provides a combined reception history of audience engagement.