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Doris Vila
Doris Vila is renowned for her installation and theatre pieces (e.g. "The Book of Air", "The
Spatial Rights Modulator", "Theatermachine") where passing viewers or actors trigger video,
holographic and sound events. As a visual artist, she has worked in a variety of media including
mixed-media paintings, lithographs, silkscreens and photographs. She headed the Holography Department
at the Art Institute of Chicago where she taught "The Mechanics of Light: Perceptual and Conceptual".
Vila's piece for the Roulette TV tape is a multi-media theatre work entitled "1, 2, 3 Much" which
consists of tableaux built from the letters, literary musings and phantasmagoric drawings (selected
from over 25,000 pieces) of the Swiss genius Adolf W‚lfli who lived most of his life in an institution
for mental patients. The work includes images of falling stars and star birds, discussions of algebra
as music (W‚lfli produced his own form of graph music early in the 20th century), the "God-Father heaven"
with its "omnipotence moths", an ecstatic celestial numbering nomenclature, and other amazing conceptual
visions described in W‚lfliĚs own wandering, poetical style. These are accompanied by strange waltzes,
abstract hymns, and surreal electronic soundscapes by composer David Weinstein. An actor moves live among
these elements, gradually transforming his appearance by adding elements to a fantastical bird and flower-like
costume. In the post-performance interview, Vila explains her fascination with Adolf W‚lfli as he worked his
way back to some coherent existence and re-invented himself, speculates on the relationship of sanity and creative
activity, describes interactive art as the realization of a dream that everyone shares, and unfolds the making
of her piece entitled "Flock of Words". Click
here
to view clip.
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