Peter van Riper (July 8, 1942 – November 18, 1998) was an American sound and light environment artist, musician and pioneer of laser art and holography.
Peter van Riper | |
---|---|
Born | July 8, 1942 |
Died | (aged 56) |
Occupation(s) | Artist, musician, pioneer |
Biography
editVan Riper was born in Detroit's Inner City, Michigan, the son of a psychoanalyst and an avid record collector.[1] During the 1960s he received a B.A. Far Eastern History, and Art History from the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, graduated in Art History at Tokyo University and the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, and took part in Fluxus performances and exhibitions in Japan. He later appeared on Tellus Audio Cassette Magazine #24 FluxTellus, Harvestworks, 1990, as part of an ensemble performing George Maciunas's Solo For Lips And Tongue. He collaborated with Fluxus members during exhibitions and performances, but Van Riper's influences are much wider. He is a true sound artist whose music is often inspired by Far Eastern traditions from Japan or Indonesia.[2]
From 1967 to 1970, van Riper was a member of Editions Inc., an Ann Arbor, Michigan gallery of holography, animated along laser physicist Lloyd Cross and artist Jerry Pethick (1935–2003).[3] In 1970 they organized an exhibition at the Cranbrook Academy, and at the Finch College Museum in New York. Both Cross and Pethick co-founded the School of Holography, San Francisco, California.[4] Van Riper exhibited holograms during The Nature Of Light: Exploring Unconventional Photographic Techniques exhibition, Joyce Goldstein Gallery, New York, 1996, and also created a sound performance during the exhibition opening.
Collaborations
editWith choreographer Simone Forti
In the late 1970s and early 1980s, Van Riper worked with dancer Simone Forti, providing lighting design and live sound accompaniment to her dance performances.[5] An avant garde dancer and choreographer, Forti took part in some of Allan Kaprow's 1960s happenings and specialized in improvised dancing.[6] While working with her, Van Riper mostly used soprano and sopranino saxophones but also various devices and objects or even tape music. He also moved freely around the stage and dancer.
With visual artist Eugènia Balcells
Van Riper provided what he calls Acobxcvxcvustic Metal Music and small percussion works to Barcelona video and installation artist Eugènia Balcells[7] (born 1943), who settled in New York from 1979 to 1988. For TV Weave, an installation with TV screens first showed at Metrònom gallery, Barcelona, 1985, Peter Van Riper played chiming music from suspended aluminium baseball bats. An excerpt from aluminium baseball bats music can be found on The Aerial #4 CD.[8] Says Balcells:
The music played by Peter Van Riper creates a tonal environment, a continuous sound created by percussion on aluminium baseball bats, cut at different lengths and suspended with cables in the space.[9]
With performance artist Sha Sha Higby
Van Riper collaborated with yet another performance artist: Sha Sha Higby.[10]
Other works
editOn December 6, 1982, he performed together with Jackson Mac Low and percussionist Z'EV, during a show called Language/Theater: Language/Noise, at Martinson Hall, Public Theater, New York.[11] That same year he was included in a collective exhibition called Young Fluxus, Artists Space gallery, New York, 1982.
He composed music for Seven Days in Space, a 90' video of NASA space exploration:
Earth, Moon, Mars and Jupiter: Video from Interplanetary Space, December 14, 1976 - January 8, 1977. The Kitchen presents an exhibition of video material collected by manned and unmanned NASA space probes to the Moon, Mars and Jupiter (Apollo, Viking and Pioneer), including on-board footage from Sky Lab and television transmissions to the Earth. This show is produced in cooperation with George Bolling.
[From The Kitchen Center for Video and Music program notes[12] for December 1976.
List of sound works
edit- The Simple Existence of Any One Thing, in 'Everson Video 75', Everson Museum of Art, Syracuse, NY, 1975
- Big Room for kalimba, saxophones and plastic hose (w/ Forti choreography), 1975
- Red Green (w/ Forti choreography), 1975
- Plumbing Music, tape music created for a Simone Forti choreography 'Planet', 1976
- Three From Piru for a Simone Forti choreography 'Fan Dance', 1975
- This, a 3 channel installation with book, The Kitchen, New York, NY, December 1976
- It readings for performance, The Kitchen, New York, NY, December 1976
- Art on the Beach collective exhibition, Battery Park, Lower Manhattan, NY, 1978
- Home Base for plastic hose named 'molino', moku gyo (Japanese wooden bell) and mbira (African thumb piano), for a Simone Forti choreography, The Kitchen, New york 1979
- Indian Cicle for sopranino (video performance by Eugènia Balcells), 1981
- TV Weave, for aluminium baseball bats, music for Eugènia Balcells' installation, Metrònom gallery, Barcelona, 1985
- Sound/Light for Japanese gong to an Eugènia Balcells installation, Metrònom gallery, Barcelona and Experimental Intermedia Foundation, NY, 1985
- Shadows, sound installation w/ Eugènia Balcells, Roulette, NY, 1987
- Seeing/Hearing, 1991 (w/ Forti choreography)
- Collaboration, 1991 (w/ Forti choreography)
Recorded music
edit- Sound To Movement. New Music For Saxophones, LP, 1979 VRBLU, (A-1982-48)
- Room Space. New Music For Saxophones, LP, 1981 VRBLU (A-1982-49)
- Windows to the Sky , LP
- Music for Spaces, LP
- Indian Circle", cassette, self-release
- Direct Contact, cassette, Deep Listening Institute
- Sustainable Music, cassette, Deep Listening Institute
- Music for Spaces CD, Van Riper Editions, 1997
- Marking Time CD-ROM, in collaboration with Jerry Pethick, Kamloops Art Gallery, 1998
Appears on:
- George Maciunas Solo For Lips And Tongue, included in Tellus Audio Cassette Magazine #24 FluxTellus, Harvestworks, 1990
- Heart included in The Aerial #4 cassette & CD, What Next? label, 1991
- Acoustic Metal Music included in Anti-Disc I, 33rpm flexi disc, Anti-Utopia, 1990
- NAP CD Connection, CD published by New Arts Program,[13] Pennsylvania
References
edit- ^ From a Van Riper 1997 radio interview
- ^ See Steve Peter's liner notes to The Aerial #4. A Journal In Sound cassette & CD, What Next? - Nonsequitur Foundation, Santa Fe, NM, 1991
- ^ From Rebecca Deem's Jerry Pethick obituary, 2004
- ^ See John Fairstein's 1997 article The San Francisco School of Holography
- ^ Sally Banes, Terpsichore in Sneakers: Post-Modern Dances, Wesleyan University Press, 1987. See especially Chapter I: Simone Forti: Dancing As If Newborn, pp 20–40
- ^ (in French) Christophe Delerce Les rapports danse/musique après 1945 aux Etats-Unis, IRCAM, Paris, 1999. See especially Chapter 2.2: L'improvisation. Available online.
- ^ "Eugènia Balcells". eugeniabalcells.com.
- ^ Heart, included in The Aerial #4. A Journal In Sound cassette & CD, What Next? - Nonsequitur Foundation, Santa Fe, NM, 1991
- ^ "Whomp Whip Music". eugeniabalcells.com.
- ^ "The Art of Sha Sha Higby". shashahigby.com.
- ^ See handbill in The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts archive (ref. b. 2-232 f. 22)
- ^ "The Kitchen Center for Video and Music" (PDF). Vasulka.org. December 1976. Retrieved 11 January 2019.
- ^ "NAP » NAP Publications". Archived from the original on 2009-01-06. Retrieved 2009-02-09.
External links
edit- Van Riper page at Deep Listening Institute
- Eugènia Balcells' web site
- Holography history.
- Kalvos & Damian 2 radio shows with Peter Van Riper, November 1997.
- Tumblr weblog