Difference between revisions of "Arts and engineering groups and collectives in CEE"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Line 46: | Line 46: | ||
* Libor Zajíček, "The History of Electroacoustic Music in the Czech and Slovak Republics", ''Leonardo Music Journal'', Vol. 5, (1995), pp. 39-48 [http://www.jstor.org/stable/1513160] | * Libor Zajíček, "The History of Electroacoustic Music in the Czech and Slovak Republics", ''Leonardo Music Journal'', Vol. 5, (1995), pp. 39-48 [http://www.jstor.org/stable/1513160] | ||
* http://www.ekac.org/dialogicimag.html | * http://www.ekac.org/dialogicimag.html | ||
+ | * Jarmila Doubravová, Hudba a výtvarné umění, Prague: Academia, 1982 |
Revision as of 19:09, 30 August 2008
- Czechoslovakia
- Zdeněk Sýkora with Jaroslav Blažek, Prague, since 1966, first computer generated line paintings in 1972
- Jozef Jankovič with Imrich Bertók, Bratislava, since 1966/1973, lithographies and serigraphies based on computer-generated drawings
- Jaroslav Frič with Josef Svoboda (Polyvision, 1967); Jaroslav Frič with Radúz Činčera (Kinoautomat, 1968)
- composer and theorist Alois Piňos with graphic artist Dalibor Chatrný, created four audiovisual compositions in 1969-71
- Milan Grygar with musical theorist Vladimír Lébl, exhibition for the festival of experimental music in Smolenice, 1970
- Petr Kotík with Jan Kučera, at Buffalo University, 1971-1983
- Juraj Bartusz with Vladimír Haltenberger, Bratislava, since 1973, manufactured sculptures based on computer-generated curves
- Daniel Fischer with computer engineers Pavol Fischer and Igor Klačanský, Bratislava, since 1975, computer morphing line drawings
- Milan Guštar has been providing technical support for the works by David Černý, Silver, Federico Díaz, Miloš Vojtěchovský, Michael Bielický and others since 1987.
- Media_art_in_CEE#Electro-acoustic_music_studios_and_societies
- more
- Dvizheniye group, Moscow, 1962/64-1976
- Exat 51 group in Zagreb ?
- ARGO group, Russia, early 1970s
- Open form in Poland
- Theremin Center Moscow *1992
- http://societyofalgorithm.org/B22F/01/index.html
- http://societyofalgorithm.org/B22F/04/index.html
Works
Jozef Jankovič, exterior design for a general hospital in Bratislava IV, colored aluminium and epoxy, 6 x 6 m, 1981-1982. The artwork was created according to computer drawings using the PDP11 computer and the Calcomp plotter. Each column shows the morphing of an outline of part of the human body into an electrocardiograph signal.
Literature
- Martin Šperka, "The Origins of Computer Graphics in the Czech and Slovak Republics", Leonardo, Vol. 27, No. 1 (1994), pp. 45-50 [1]
- Jarmila Doubravová, "Music and Visual Art: Their Relation as a Topical Problem of the Contemporary Music in Czechoslovakia", International Review of the Aesthetics and Sociology of Music, Vol. 11, No. 2 (Dec., 1980), pp. 219-228 [2]
- Zdeněk Sýkora, Jaroslav Blažek, "Computer-Aided Multi-Element Geometrical Abstract Paintings", Leonardo, Vol. 3, No. 4 (Oct., 1970), pp. 409-413 [3]
- Libor Zajíček, "The History of Electroacoustic Music in the Czech and Slovak Republics", Leonardo Music Journal, Vol. 5, (1995), pp. 39-48 [4]
- http://www.ekac.org/dialogicimag.html
- Jarmila Doubravová, Hudba a výtvarné umění, Prague: Academia, 1982