Meet the Artist: Julian Stein and Joe Cantrell

Meet the Artist series features a chat with Julian Stein and Joe Cantrell, two of the FETA Prize in Sound Art 2019 finalists.

Meet the Artist series continues! This Monday, we will feature a chat with two FETA Prize in Sound Art 2019 finalists Julian Stein and Joe Cantrell moderated by Juraj Kojš.

FETA Foundation invites you to Meet the Artist, the series of online events dedicated to some of the most talented contemporary sound artists.

On Monday, August 1, at 7-8 pm EST on Zoom, we introduce you to JULIAN STEIN and JOE CANTRELL. They are FETA Prize in Sound Art finalists of 2019 with their works a room that I take care of (Stein) and copy|write (Cantrell).

Join us and ask questions. Discover and engage!

About Julian Stein:

Julian Stein is a media artist based in Los Angeles, CA. He creates performances and installations that examine relationships between the analog and the digital, primarily through expressions of sound, and movement, and light. Through the use of technology, his work aims to reimagine aspects of daily life, highlighting rhythmic and patterned structures to seek out shared qualities between the natural and built world.

 

As a creative developer, Julian constructs bespoke experiences for physical and web-based environments, giving careful attention to design and interaction. He works with artists, musicians, agencies, and institutions to realize creative ventures, crafting each project through code, fabrication, and custom electronics. MFA from the University of California Los Angeles in Design Media Arts, BFA from Concordia University in Electroacoustic Studies.More about Julian Stein: julianstein.net

About Joe Cantrell:

Joe Cantrell is a musician and sound artist specializing in installations, compositions, and performances inspired by the implications and consequences of technological objects and practices. His work examines the incessant acceleration of technology and media production, its ownership, and the waste it produces. Joe’s live musical performances involve the creation and manipulation of electronic feedback soundscapes using only discarded, obsolete and/or broken technology.

His work has been honored with grants from the Creative Capital Foundation, New Music USA, the University of California Institute for Research in the Arts, and the Qualcomm Institute Initiative for Digital Exploration of Arts and Sciences, among others. Joe holds a BFA in music technology from the California Institute of the Arts, an MFA in digital arts and new media from UC Santa Cruz, and a PhD in music from UC San Diego.

More about Joe Cantrell: joecantrell.net

Feta Foundation: https://www.fetafoundation.com/

FETA Prize in Sound Art Archive: https://fetafoundation.org/feta-sound-prize-virtual-archives/

The FETA Prize in Sound Art was established in 2013 to promote a broad range of contemporary American sound and installation artists. This page serves as a compendium of winners, finalists, and judges that represent a wonderfully diverse collection of contemporary sound art.

FETA Salad: Summer Mini-University at the Garden

FETA Salad: Summer Mini-University at the Garden

Friday, July 22, 2022
1-4:30PM
Banyan Room
Miami Beach Botanical Garden
2000 Convention Center Dr., Miami Beach, FL 33139

FETA invites you to participate in an afternoon of multidisciplinary activities at the garden. You will learn to make music while dancing with wireless sensors, discover your inner vocal techniques, design a garden-inspired hat, create a cyber-selfie, whisper with succulents, improv theater-style, move Butoh and more.

A group of Miami-based artists par excellence from diverse disciplines Rachel Weiss, Dimitry Chamy, Charo Oquet, Luisa Buitrago, Vanessa Tamayo, Juan Carlos Zaldivar, Juraj Kojs and Pioneer Winter (Closer Encounters Project) will guide you in your explorations.

Mix arts, technologies and improvisation into a bowl of summer delight. Enter hungry and leave craving for more.

For all ages. For professionals and aficionados alike. Get yourself that fun-learning credit.

Wear comfortable clothes.

Admission:
Adults: $10
Seniors, students and kids: free

Get your ticket here.

With support from Miami Beach Botanical Garden, Knight Foundation, Harold Golen Gallery and Miami-Dade County Department of Cultural Affairs and the Cultural Affairs Council, the Miami-Dade County Mayor and Board of County Commissioners.

If I only had a garden….

The Bridge Miami and FETA invite you to participate in

If I only had a garden…

People, plants, and the opossum play.

An exploratory collaborative art and garden-making experience.

March 14-18, 2022

4-9 PM

The Bridge Miami: 4220 NW 7th Ave, Miami, FL 33127

Spring is in the air, and FETA has historically organized a festival with performances for live and virtual audiences. This year, however, we are fantasizing about a shared experience in which everybody participates.

We invite you to imagine a public garden with us—an outdoor place in which plants, arts and technologies grow together intertwined by collective dynamic imagination. Dream it. Make it. Together.

During the week of experimental outdoor art making and community building, we will meet 4-9PM and design a living prototype for the garden at the Bridge, focusing on the interaction between emergence, passing and sustainability through the lens of the plantological exploration.

Participatory activities, listening sessions, collaborative gardening, construction of structures, and tech-art making will be guided by the garden itself. Daily sharing sessions will begin at 8PM.

Join us. Participate. Learn. Play.

The week will be guided by the iconic Sonocybernetic creator Onyx Ashanti (MI), musical robot maker Troy Rogers (MN), projection master Daniel Benoit (MN), wired-less sonic technologist Alex Lough (NJ), urban community designer Hanah Davenport (NJ),  the artphibian orchid whisperer Juraj Kojš (FL), experimental electronic music impresario Nicole Martinez (FL), Insta musicologist Nevena Stanic-Kovacevic (FL), tarot reader and the Life sage Betzaida Ferrer (FL), the linguistic architect Nadia Naami (FL), creative production guru Luisa Buitrago (FL), augmented reality film and video voyager Juan Carlos Zaldivar (FL), transcdisiplinary multi-modal story teller Dimitry Chamy (FL), the beauty-beyond-the-mainstream choreographer Pioneer Winter (FL)  and the garden architecture luminary Maria Isabel Rodriguez (FL).

If you’d like, bring something to honor the garden such as a plant cutting or an article that would fit our outdoor setting.

Creator sign up for any of the following dates (4-9PM).

It is important that you are present for the whole duration of the session.

Select one and send us your info at kojs@fetafoundation.org as soon as you can and no later than March 12, 2022.

Monday, March 14, 15, 16, 17 and 18:

Name:

Discipline:

Follow the event on Facebook

With the support of the The Bridge, Harold Golen Gallery  and Miami-Dade County Department of Cultural Affairs and the Cultural Affairs Council, the Miami-Dade County Mayor and Board of County Commissioners.

Meet the Artist: Bryan Jacobs

Meet the Artist series features a chat with Bryan Jacobs, the winner of Feta Prize in Sound Art 2015

FETA Foundation invites you to Meet the Artist, the series of online events dedicated to some of the most talented sound artists nowadays who won out FETA Prize in Sound Art!
On Wednesday, September 29, 2021 at 7 pm EST on Zoom, we introduce you to BRYAN JACOBS.
Bryan Jacobs is the FETA Prize in Sound Art Winner of 2015. Along with his winning piece “Subwhistle,” Bryan will present several other projects.
Join us and ask questions. Discover and engage!
About Bryan Jacobs:
Composer, performer, and sound artist, Bryan Jacobs’ work focuses on interactions between live performers, mechanical instruments and computers. His pieces are often theatrical in nature, pitting blabber-mouthed fanciful showoffs against timid reluctants. The sounds are playfully organized and many times mimic patterns found in human dialogue. Hand-build electromechanical instruments controlled by microcontrollers bridge acoustic and electroacoutic sound worlds. These instruments live dual lives as time-based concert works and non-time-based gallery works.
View Subwhistle here: http://www.bryanjacobsmusic.com/subwhistle2.html
More info about Bryan Jacobs: http://www.bryanjacobsmusic.com/
Get your free ticket here.Feta Foundation: https://www.fetafoundation.com/FETA Prize in Sound Art Archive: https://fetafoundation.org/feta-sound-prize-virtual-archives/

Meet the Artist: Jaime Oliver

Meet the Artist series features a chat with Jaime Oliver, the winner of Feta Prize in Sound Art 2018

FETA Foundation invites you to Meet the Artist, the series of online events dedicated to some of the most talented sound artists nowadays who won out FETA Prize in Sound Art!

On Saturday, May 22, at 6 pm EST on Zoom, we introduce you to JAIME OLIVER.

Jaime is the FETA Prize in Sound Art Winner of 2018. Along with his winning piece “Caracoles IV,” Jaime will present several other sound art projects.

Join us and ask questions. Discover and engage!

About Jaime Oliver:

Jaime Oliver La Rosa (Lima, 1979) is a music composer and sound artist working in various ares of computer music and electronic arts. His work includes music for instruments, interactive sistems, live sound performance, as well as sound objects and installations, computer musical instruments and open source software development. He has also collaborated with various artists making music for video, cinema, theater, and performance art. His academic research focuses on the changes in how our concepts of musical instruments have changed over the course of the 20th century as well as the role played by Latin America in the creation of musical Avant Gardes. He has created the open source Silent Drum and MANO controllers and instruments, that use computer vision techniques to continuously track and classify hand gestures. He is also developing [notes] a system for computer assisted notation and generative music in Pure Data and LilyPond.

His work has been featured in many international festivals and conferences. Some recognitions include scholarships and grants from the Mellon Foundation, Fulbright Commission, the University of California, Meet the Composer and the Ministry of Culture of Spain, and composition and research residencies at ZKM and IRCAM. He has been awarded prizes for electronic arts FILE PRIX LUX 2010 from FILE Festival, the 2009 Guthman Musical Instrument Competition from the Georgia Tech Center for Music Technology, a GIGA-HERTZ-PREIS 2010 musical innovation prize from the ZKM Institute for Music and Acoustics, the 2019 FETA sound art prize from the Foundation for Emerging Technologies in the Arts, and the Frances Densmore best article prize from the American Musical Instrument Society AMIS.

Oliver obtained a PhD in Computer Music from the University of California, San Diego (2011) where he studied with Miller Puckette and was Mellon Post-Doctoral Fellow at Columbia University & the CMC in New York. He is currently Associate Professor of Composition at NYU and co-director of the NYU Waverly Labs for Computing and Music.

Get your free ticket here.

Moderator: Nevena Stanić Kovačević

Listen to “Caracoles IV:” http://www.jaimeoliver.pe/caracoles-iv-2018

More information about

Jaime Oliver: http://www.jaimeoliver.pe/

Feta Foundation: https://www.fetafoundation.com/

FETA Prize in Sound Art Archive: https://fetafoundation.org/feta-sound-prize-virtual-archives/

FETA Outdoor Spring Earth Happening

The spring is in the air, and FETA and the Bridge Miami will be celebrating it with an afternoon of in-person installations and performances. Milica Paranosic (NYC) will present a collection of her COVID paraphernalia (masks, face-shields, gloves, goggles and hand sanitizers), transforming them into fashion and sounding objects. Based on his life in Everglades, the choreographer and dancer Yukio Suzuki (Tokyo) will swirl in Cross-pollination, a collaborative project with the Miami-based composer and sound artist Juraj Kojš. Nicole Martinez and Fereshteh Toosi will also contribute with their sonic works to our spring gathering.

Performances begin at 6, 7 and 8PM. Installations will run 6-9PM.

Bring an instrument, a sounding object, chair and spring mood. Join the happening. Bring a friend.

With the support of the Bridge, Harold Golen Gallery, PAXy, AIRIE, Paracademia and Miami-Dade County Department of Cultural Affairs and the Cultural Affairs Council, the Miami-Dade County Mayor and Board of County Commissioners.

Photo credit for M. Paranosic’s pandemic art piece: Dejan Kovacevic

Out in the Air

Music performances and installations at the Miami Beach Botanical Garden

Begin your experience with the magnificent multimedia performance by the New York Times-celebrated flutist and performer Margaret Lancaster, telling a story of pandemic during which her instrument/voice became weaponized. In the garden gazebo’s Breath of Death Pavilion, Lancaster will ‘safely’ present a carefully crafted program of contemporary compositions selected from an international call, including those by Dorothy Hindman, Alex Lough, Elizabeth Adams, Christopher Cerrone, Yi Ding, Moritz Eggert, Elizabeth Hoffman, Anne LeBaron, Eric Lyon, Milica Paranosic, and Jacob TV. Alex Lough will accompany Lancaster on electronics.

Enter Rachel Weiss’s Rudimentary Voyage, an open roof meditation pavilion designed as an individual reflective space. Weiss writes: “Imagine a journey—a voyage to a quiet desert. In the pavilion, the spectator will experience a relaxing ambient audio-visual installation.” Created after an ancient Sukkah tent, the experience will feature experimental video art and sounds of voice, breathing and nature.

Then, immerse yourself in the garden sprinkled with four of Juraj Kojš’s Orchid Music sound and media installations. Hear music based on the DNA sequence of ten Florida native orchid species. Navigate through a small maze fashioned from plastic orchid pots. Try performing a virtual synthesizer that generates more sonifications of orchid DNA sequences. Experience a memorial board populated with name tags of deceased orchids.

The experience will conclude with a festive gathering at the garden’s canal promenade, where Troy Rogers will float on his magical pedal-powered boat. His automated sousaphone and glockenspiel will project a dadaist musical calls, making him the first robotic gondolier on the city’s canals. Joined by Alex Lough, Juraj Kojš, Rachel Weiss and Margaret Lancaster in an improvised happening, this outdoor carnival promises to stir a celebration of life, art and garden through exploration and experimentation.

Thursday, Friday and Saturday, December 3-5, 2020

1-2PM: Guided Walk through the installations, Margaret Lancaster performing music of Dorothy Hindman and Troy Rogers performing on a boat at the canal

3-4PM: Guided Walk through the installations, Margaret Lancaster performing music of Alex Lough and Troy Rogers at the canal and Troy Rogers performing on a boat at the canal

5-7PM: Guided Walk through the installations, Margaret Lancaster performing works by Elizabeth Adams, Christopher Cerrone, Yi Ding, Moritz Eggert, Elizabeth Hoffman, Anne LeBaron, Eric Lyon, Milica Paranosic, and Jacob TV; Troy Rogers performing on a boat at the canal

FREE ADMISSION.

Supported by the FETA Foundation, Miami Beach Botanical Garden, the City of Miami Beach, University of Miami and Miami-Dade County Department of Cultural Affairs and the Cultural Affairs Council, the Miami-Dade County Mayor and Board of County Commissioners.

The Breath of Death Pavilion Program

featuring Margaret Lancaster, flute with Alex Lough, electronics

Eric Lyon — Bottle Episode  World Premiere
Elizabeth Adams – Flute Song
Milica Paranosic — Lady M
Yi Ding – Ordeal: The Prediction  partial Premiere
Moritz Eggert – Solfeggio (“Katalog”)   US premiere
Eric Lyon – Laughter is the Best Medicine   World Premiere
Christopher Cerrone –  Liminal Highway
III. Between Consciousness and Sleep
IV. Liminal (Warnings Signs)
Jacob TV – Farewell Feathered Friends US Premiere 
Anne LeBaron – Sachamama
Elizabeth Hoffman – for margaret: bloom back brighter   World Premiere

About the artists:

“New-music luminary” (The New York Times), Margaret Lancaster ((flutist/performance artist/actor/dancer) has built a large repertoire of interactive, cross-disciplinary solo works that employ electronics and mixed media.  Performance highlights include Lincoln Center Festival, Spoleto Festival USA, Santa Fe New Music, Art Basel/Miami, Edinburgh Festival, NIME/Copenhagen, Tap City, and the 7-year global run of OBIE-winning Mabou Mines Dollhouse (Helene).  She has recorded on New World Records, World Edition, Naxos, Innova, Tzadik, New Focus, and Mode. Ongoing collaborations include projects with FETA Foundation, Stockhausen’s KLANG cycle, and with Either/Or touring Morton Feldman’s 5 hour epic For Philip Guston…

Troy Rogers is deeply involved in the creation, performance, and dissemination of early 21st century semi-nomadic robot herder’s music. His Robot Rickshaw is a human-driven cart full of musical robots designed for all-terrain performance scenarios ranging from guerrilla drive-by rapid-fire black-MIDI-burst-spewing dadaist street interventions to extended duration drone therapy sessions. His instruments and performances joyfully teeter between mind-bending wonder and catastrophic failure, underscoring a firm belief in humans as amplifiers of low probabilistic states, as well as the seeming unlikelihood of our species surviving its technological adolescence, all the while reveling in the humor to be found in such contradictions. Recognized with a Minnesota Emerging Composer Award by the American Composers Forum, Rogers is a committed independent educator, regularly presenting lectures and offering Making Music with Robots and STEAM education workshops at universities, galleries, community art centers, makerspaces, and schools throughout the US.

Rachel Weiss is a Miami-based composer, opera singer, vocal artist, interdisciplinary artist and an educator. As a composer, she has created original music that meditates a strong connection to philosophical discourses and contemporary technologies. Her work expands the conventional composition to dedicated explorations of extended vocal techniques, micro-tonal scales, multi-cultural dimensionalities, and interdisciplinary art. Rachel puts great emphasis on creating new techniques for original vocal improvisation performances. Her creative practice spans across a wide range of genres and disciplines, experimenting with spaces on the border between traditional western-eastern music and multidisciplinary art forms such as sound installation, performance art and interactive multimedia.

My name is Juraj Kojš, and I am an artist from Slovakia and USA, exploring the fields of music, sound art, theater, poetry, mixed media, multimedia, bioacoustics and technologies as a maker and performer. Collaborating with artists and scientists, producing other people’s works, doing scholarly research and teaching also give me joy, as does living in Miami, FL. Miami New Times described my muscle-powered multimedia Neraissance as “striking and unforgettable,” MiamiArtzine called Signals “enthralling and immersive,” and Miami Herald praised Bang for the Train as “the most profound…unexpected and enjoyable.” www.kojs.net

Alex Lough is a composer, performer, and sound artist. His work focuses on implementing experimental technology in order to discover new performance contexts with particular attention given to the body and the physicality of sound. His research is primarily concerned with the new taxonomic distinction of “performed electronics” and embodied performance practices as an electronicist. He is currently a PhD candidate at UC Irvine in the new Integrated Composition, Improvisation, and Technology program where he studies with Mari Kimura, Nicole Mitchell, Simon Penny, and Chris Dobrian.

 

Back to School

It has been more than a month, since those engaged in higher education have been back in the classroom. Whether virtual, physical or hybrid, we continue to learn and enlighten our existence to better deal with the current unsettling world.

The theme for this session is Sound. Join the mini sessions (3-minutes of instructions followed by 3 minutes of discussion) on all aspects of sound and join our panel to discuss what it means to be back in school these days.

Participating artists include Milica Paranosic, Rachel Weiss, Sebastian DeWay, Jose Hernandez Sanchez, Jason Charney, Eric Lyon and Juraj Kojš. A panel moderated by Nevena Stanic Kovacevic will follow, including Michael Linville, Milica Paranosic, Rhett M Del Campo and Benjamin Montgomery.

Read about the panelists here.

A e-dance party on the theme of Back to School to follow at 5PM EST.

Reserve your free seat here:
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/back-to-school-fete-mini-uni-tickets-122062338741
An email with the Zoom link will follow.

Follow the event on FB:

https://www.facebook.com/events/612725776276229/