Please join us for our closing reception this Saturday, July 30th at 8 p.m.
Help us release Pushing the Envelope at its final event of the month-long exhibit at the Artery. Dancer Janice Lancaster Larsen will perform in R. Brooke Priddy’s earthen dress that captivated so many of you at the opening event.
Join us for an evening of music and dance, while reflecting on the pieces inspired by Bob Moog’s sonic legacy.
Public Opening Reception: Saturday, July 9th at 8 p.m.
Workshops (All Ages):
Wed. July 13th
Bridget Elmer at 6 p.m.
Wed. July 20th
Chris Stack & Steve Wager at 6 p.m.
Tue. July 26th
River Guerguerian & Gene Felice at 6 p.m.
Closing Evening of Performances: Saturday, July 30th at 8 p.m.
Artery Hours: 11 a.m. until 6 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday
Pushing the Envelope: ADSR is a forthcoming multimedia art show melding the historical roots of electronic music with the creativity of Asheville artists who have been inspired by the connections between analog synthesis and visual and performing arts. Bob Moog’s pioneering work will serve as inspiration for the exhibit. The show will be held at The Artery in Asheville’s River Arts District from Saturday, July 9, through Saturday, July 30. The Asheville Area Arts Council and the Bob Moog Foundation are cosponsoring the three-week exhibit.
Artists involved in the show will interpret the concept of shaping sound through an envelope, drawing inspiration from the synthesizer parameters attack, decay, sustain, and release. Pushing the Envelope‘s participating artists are:
R. Brooke Priddy, Janice Lancaster Larsen, Adam Larsen, and Kima Moore A fashion/movement/installation/sound collaboration
Jason Daniello Exploring interactive, analog sound
Gene A. Felice II & David McConville An interactive, cymatics/analog sound collaboration that will allow viewers to visualize sound waves.
Elisa Faires Sound performance/installation
River Guerguerian Virtuoso percussionist presents sound performance and workshop
Bridget Elmer An analog sound-inspired letterpress print series
Shaun Hollingsworth A Bob Moog Foundation photo print series exploring vintage circuitry
Gabriel Shaffer This sculptural theremin exhibit will allow attendees to interact with metal art, light and analog sound
The work of these artists will surround a small selection of analog electronic instruments, schematics, notes, and ephemera from Bob Moog’s archives, illustrating the connection between innovation, electronic sound, and creativity in the arts. A focal point of the show, the archives will illustrate both the history and the technology behind the Moog sound. This includes the envelope generator, a major component in music synthesis that controls changes in a sounds loudness and spectral content over time. Most envelope generators control four parametersattack, decay, sustain, and releasecommonly referred to as simply ADSR.
In addition, the show will give the Asheville Area Arts Council and the Bob Moog Foundation opportunities to highlight their respective missions and pay homage to art, music, and technology as intertwined mediums of expression that were all expressed in Bob Moogs work.
There will also be a series of all-ages workshops focused on the shows theme and on community outreach and education. Participants will have opportunities to learn about electronic synthesis, sound visualization, and art in a hands-on environment.
Workshop Schedule and Descriptions
All Pushing the Envelope workshops have a suggested donation of $5 to attend.
Workshops all start at 6pm and run approximately 90 minutes.
Bridget Elmer – July 13
This workshop will explore sound visualization through the processes of printing and bookmaking. Each participant will experiment with translating sounds into hand printed images and transforming their prints into a variety of book forms. No experience necessary. There is a materials fee of $5 per person.
Steve Wager and Chris Stack – July 20
We Have Fallen Into The Place Where Everything Is Music
Don’t worry about writing down these songs!
And if one of our instruments breaks, it doesn’t matter.
We have fallen into the place where everything is music.
~Rumi
Ever wanted to know what was happening in a synth that creates those amazing noises? What is the difference between analog and digital (and why do some people think analog is better?) Steve Wager, long time BMF Volunteer and synthesizer enthusiast, will explain the foundation of electronic music in easy to understand terms utilizing the Bob Moog Foundations new educational synth, the Novitiate. Participants will then have the opportunity to expand upon their new knowledge with a workshop by Chris Stack of ExperimentalSynth.com fame. Chris will explore the basics of experimental patches and sound design and will treat attendees with a short performance.
Chris explains “Its an amazing time to be a musician. We can now make music on everything from traditional instruments, computers and synths to tablets and even cell phones. In this workshop, I will weave all this together and explains the connections and technologies that make it possible”.
Gene Felice and River Guerguerian – July 26
Gene Felice is a rock star multi media artist. River Guerguerian is an internationally acclaimed virtuoso percussionist. The have teamed up in this unique workshop to explore the elements of sound, frequency & matter, via a timeline of ancient to contemporary sources of analog sound (singing bowls, gongs, theremin, water & sand) with participants. Through cymatics they will illustrate both sides of how matter affects sound, and how sound affects matter.
We are delighted to be collaborating with a breadth of Asheville’s talented artists. Inspiring creativity, be it sonic, visual, technical, or intellectual, is at the heart of the Foundation’s work. It’s very exciting to see Bob Moog’s work come alive through the exceptional talent that exists in our unique city.
Michelle Moog-Koussa, Bob Moog Foundations Executive Director
Through the various forms of synthesis, we control the spectral content of sound and image as it changes over time. Through the modes of attack, decay, sustain, and release, we influence the sonic character of our work. The ADSR envelope will control the amplitude and frequency of creation. From nil to peak, subsequent rundown, the key is released, leveling to zero.
Gene Felice, Collaborating Artist & Curator for the show
The legacy of Bob Moog and his impact on the creative community here truly cannot be overstated. Were honored, not only to have the opportunity to pay tribute, but also to engage several of the areas most vital emerging artists who continue to build upon Moogs ingenuity.
Graham Hackett, Interim Executive Director of the Asheville Area Arts Council
I worked at the Moog plant in Williamsville, NY when I was 19 and was a Mini assembler…I forget how many I put together but I know I signed my full name to number 5000! I learned so much while there, from the geniuses that worked for Mr. Moog (pronounced MOGE, as he himself stressed to me when I asked him about that!)
to Keith Emerson, for whom whom I was honored to have fixed his mod rack. Everybody was very friendly there and most knew they were working ina factory,yes, but the most important factory on Earth…the one that created these monster music-making machines. I only wish they had marketed the top-secret digital piano that was being developed…I wonder where the working prototype is that we used to sneak into that back room to play ended up?? Thanks, Bob, wherever you are.