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166 lines
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166 lines
7.5 KiB
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title = 'Stephen Vitiello on Sound Art'
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date = 2024-06-04T16:56:03-04:00
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draft = false
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tags = ['interview']
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{{< rawhtml >}}
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<div id="buzzsprout-player-15057189"></div><script src="https://www.buzzsprout.com/2320027/15057189-stephen-vitiello-on-sound-art.js?container_id=buzzsprout-player-15057189&player=small" type="text/javascript" charset="utf-8"></script>
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{{< /rawhtml >}}
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---
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**Leonard Francis Coogan**
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The following is an interview with Stephen Vitiello, sound artist and Chair of Kinetic Imaging at VCUarts.
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He made his breakthrough as a sound artist with the residency he did
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[recording sounds of and from the 91st floor of the World Trade Center in 1999](https://whitney.org/collection/works/15832).
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I don't know Stephen personally, but he'll be one of my professors when I start
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the Kinetic Imaging program at VCU.
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---
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**Leonard Francis Coogan**
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First off, what is sound art?
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**Stephen Vitello**
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It's funny, I laugh nervously because I don't have a perfect answer. Many years
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ago I came up with a response, and so many people jumped on it being wrong. At
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that time I associated sound art too closely with installation, but it can be
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radio, it can be stereo, it can be any number of things. I tend to think of it
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is starting conceptually somewhere in between visual art and music. Often
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presented in art spaces -- but almost anything I say can be argued.
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**Leonard Francis Coogan**
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Do we need the term "sound art"?
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**Stephen Vitello**
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It's so tricky because it's mostly academics who want definitions... and
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funders. Anytime you get into labels like "minimalism", most of the major
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minimalists hate that term. I can't say I love the label, but I don't hate it.
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It's helped me get opportunities and gallery shows and commissions and
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collaborations, so I don't know of a better term.
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I see whatever sound art is, has roots in many places: experimental music,
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conceptual art, visual art. There's many ways to look at it. And different
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people come to it from different places. Some from literature, some from poetry,
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some from architecture. Where
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**Leonard Francis Coogan**
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How'd you get into sound art?
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**Stephen Vitello**
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There was a time I knew chords and I wrote songs, choruses, in 5/4 time that
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jumped to 5/8. I've lost all of that. It doesn't mean I've lost everything, it
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just means I've shifted what my skillset is.
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I played in bands for a long time. And I'd try to play like punk rock guitar or
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post-punk. It wasn't until I heard Fred Frith's guitar solos and his use of
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motors and vibrators and putting little clips on the string and bowing that I
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realized, "oh, there is another way."
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I discovered a 60 minute CD-R by John Hudak, who made these long quiet pieces.
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He made a piece called "Pond" using hydrophones. I just loved the sound of it,
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but also this really long piece that you live with.
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I reached out to him because I was living in NYC and he lived in Brooklyn not far
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away. He invited me over and shared all sorts of things including software and
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I think he loaned me some contact mics.
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One of the most important people in my career is Bob Bielecki, who's a sound
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engineer, who was a person when I was in the WTC when I was trying to figure out
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contact mics on the window helped me get the contact mics working. I guess I
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tell this story a lot, but when I said, "I wish I could make sound like the
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color of this beautiful sunset, he pulled out a pocket full of photocells, and
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said "light has a frequency. If you can find a way to translate them, maybe I
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can find something to wire up for you." And he carved out the inside of an XLR
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tubing, replaced it with a photocell and wired it, built a little circuit for
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me. That opened up so many mental pathways.
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He came up one night with a telescope and we pointed the photocell into the
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telescope across the river to New Jersey and it picked up the sound of the light
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of a police car going by. It ended up making one of my most well-known and
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most-matured CDs even though it was done so early called "Bright and Dusty
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Things." I think all of my soundmaking started with photocell recordings.
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**Leonard Francis Coogan**
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What type of work is interesting for you?
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**Stephen Vitello**
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I like site-specific work. If somebody gives me a whitebox gallery, I often
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don't have much inspiration. I like when I'm given a space that has some kind of
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sonic resonance, but also maybe cultural resonance. Where I can walk in and feel
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something right away, but then there's room to research and learn.
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Because people are so culturally conditioned to look at visuals and how dominant
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-- but I want to make work in which sound is dominant. Once I get into a space
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and figure out "what does this speak to me?" but also "if there could be
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anything visual." If the place has got some kind of strong visual itself, how do
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I shape the experience so that at least some viewers will understand its first
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and foremost a soundspace. Sometimes the easiest thing to do is to turn the
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lights off -- but that seems very... not the right balance. But sometimes I've
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worked with a lighting designer. I've worked with an architect. Often I do work
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that's multichannel. Start to figure out where to place speakers, where to place
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the viewer... "is there really a sweet spot?" "Is there another kind of surround
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space that's more open-ended that people can move around?", that's probably
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preferable, because it's not telling you, "this is what you have to do." And in
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the same way, I try to make work that I have an idea of how I do a thing, but I
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don't want to say, "you have to get this point, otherwise you're not getting
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it." And so, a lot of what happens is that in someplace I have an experience and
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I want to translate what that experience did to me into a work of art into a
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space and give people the chance to have an experience. But again, they can't
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have _my_ experience. If I was in the Brazillian Amazon, there was something so
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specific to be there. I can only bring apart of an interesting shadow to that
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introspace in France I've been lucky enough to present at. I do consider visuals
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because I'm often presenting in visual spaces, but I try to do it very subtlely.
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My first kinda breakthrough show was in a really big group show at PS1 called
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Greater NY. Most people were in crowded spaces, I had a room to myself. I was
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disappointed that there were only 3 or 5 people in my room -- and then I
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realized I was lucky because those 3-5 people were staying for a long time which
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meant that they were getting something very different than if they were just
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quickly observing and moving on.
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**Leonard Francis Coogan**
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When you read literature, do you focus on sound?
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**Stephen Vitello**
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I do, yeah, for sure. And certainly certain writers. I've reread Virginia
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Woolfe's "Waves" so many times because I love her references to sound. There's
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others like Murakami where I like the way he slips with reality. Maybe I'm
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not thinking about it in that moment, but then when I start working on a new
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sound piece and it starts with birds and they go through some kind of
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manipulation into some kind of processed realm, I realize that something from
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the literature I like has influenced that. My favorite mystery writer is
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James Lee Burke. He writes these really rich landscape-based mysteries in
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Louisiana. I know that's influenced my connection to field recordings and a kind
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of haunted South that I don't even feel in VA as much as I fantasize about.
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**Leonard Francis Coogan**
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Thank you for the interview.
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_[Music: [Afterglow (Or Abendrot) by Stephen Vitiello](https://championversion.bandcamp.com/album/afterglow-or-abendrot)_]
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[Stephen's website](https://www.stephenvitiello.com)
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