Aesthetics of Technology-Based Performance

Aesthetics

—the philosophy and critical reflection on art (read more)

Technology-Native Performance Techniques that Exploit these Concepts

  • Appropriation—creating art using “readymade” or “found” materials or from other works of art. Examples: John Oswald’s activist Plunderphonics (recordings are hidden on his site)/Martin Arnold’s films/Christian Marclay’s live turntablism (3:10–4:00)
  • Live sampling—a performance practice starting without any pre-made/pre-recorded materials, only tools that capture material live in during the performance and transform them into new material that makes up the performance. Example: Shankcraft (TAMU)
  • Feedback—creating visual, sonic, or other material by connecting a system’s output to its own input, allowing complex, unpredictable material to emerge. Example: Rodrigo Guinski’s live cinema (TAMU)
  • Circuit bending—creative rewiring of commercial electronic devices to achieve sounds and images beyond what was intended by the manufacturer (read more); Example: Greater Sirens, BEND: A Circuit Bending Documentary
  • Glitch (in visual art and music)—creating art primarily from (or mimicking) technological artifacts usually considered to be flaws, mistakes, or garbage. Examples: MerzbowGlitch Art documentary
  • Generative (or algorithmic) art—creating art by setting a (usually simple) system into motion without knowing the what the outcome will be. It’s often a computer program, but it needn’t be. Examples: Ferin Martino (TAMU)Philip Galanter (TAMU), Mozart’s minuet dice game (he wasn’t alone)
  • Live coding—a performance practice in which a computer is programmed on stage in the moment of performance (read more); Example: Glitch Lich—TEDx talk and performing at TAMU
  • Another performance to consider: Loud Objects. This performance practice isn’t widely adopted enough to have a label worth learning, but it’s somewhat a combination of circuit bending, live coding, and generative art, and it could also be made to incorporate appropriation, feedback, and glitch if the artists desired.