| Bill Viola | |
| Born in 1951, Bill Viola received a BFA from the College of Visual
and Performing Arts at Syracuse University. He was interested in
performance and in electronic music and was a drummer in a rock band from
1968 to 1972. Describing his concentration in video in the early 70s,
Viola says, "The crucial thing for me was the process of going through an
electronic system, working with these standard kinds of circuits became a
perfect introduction to a general electronic theory. It gave me a sense
that the electronic signal was a material that could be worked with. This
was another really important realization. Physical manipulation is
fundamental to our thought processes—just watch the way a baby learns.
It's why most people have so much trouble approaching electronic media.
When electronic energies finally became concrete for me, like sounds are
to a composer, I really began to learn. Soon I made what was for me an
easy switch over to video. I never thought about [video] in terms of
images so much as electronic processes, a signal." Viola describes his
early single-channel tapes both as "songs" and as "visual poems—allegories
in the language of subjective perception." His early investigations into
the medium, including The Space Between the Teeth (1974) and Truth through
Mass Individuation (1976), employ formal strategies associated with
structural film that also operate as metaphors for transcendent vision,
creativity, and symbolic transformation/illumination—themes that preoccupy
Viola's later work, including Sweet Light (1977) and Chott el Djerid (A
Portrait in Light and Heat) (1979). Viola was one of a group of artists
who founded Synapse Video/Cable TV Center in Syracuse, New York, one of
the first alternative media centers in New York State. In 1973 ,Viola and
several musicians formed the Composers Inside Electronics Group which
performed David Tudor's Rainforest and other works internationally. In
1975, he worked as the director of Art/Tapes/22, an artist production
facility in Florence, Italy. Viola was an artist-in-residence at the
WNET's Television Lab from 1976-80 and at Sony Corporation, Atsugi, Japan
in 1980. |
Titles by Bill
Viola: |