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Herbert Brün 1978 Computer Graphic/Composition "Just Two Duet" Early Digital Art
$ 477.84
- Description
- Size Guide
Description
Herbert Brün 1978 Computer Graphic / Composition "Just Two Duet 930-4". 11 x 13 inches (print). Signed and titled ('duet 930-4') by the artist. This is a musical composition as well as a piece of early digital art.Framed and sold together with a certificate of provenance / assessment and press kit / mounted poster commemorating a retrospective of the artist's work at Rare Nest Gallery Chicago.
Herbert Brün,
Berlin, 1918 - Urbana Illinois, 2000.
Herbert Brün's computer graphics represent a watershed in early computer art and design. Widely recognized as a visionary pioneer in electronic composition including music and graphics, as a leader in social thought and computer theory and as a beloved teacher and mentor. Brün was the first musical director to bring electronic compositions to the stage, in Munich in the early 1950’s.
As a child in his father’s Berlin study, Brün began experimenting with radio technology. He left Germany in 1936 for Palestine, where he studied piano and composition at the Jerusalem Conservatory and then with Stefan Wolpe, Eli Friedman, and Frank Pelleg. He furthered his studies at Tanglewood with Aaron Copland and Columbia University from 1948 through 1950.
From 1955-61, in addition to composing, he conducted research concerning electro-acoustics and the possibilities for musical composition in Paris, Cologne, and Munich. During this period, he also worked as composer and conductor of music for the theater, notably with Fritz Kortner, gave lectures and seminars emphasizing the function of music in society, and did a series of broadcasts on contemporary music. After a lecture tour of the U.S. in 1962, Brün was invited by Lejaren Hiller to join the faculty of the University of Illinois. There Brün continued his work in the electronic studio and began research on composition with computers, which resulted in pieces for tape and instruments, tape alone, and graphics (some to be performed by interpreters). He collaborated with Heinz von Foerster on several interdisciplinary courses in heuristics and cybernetics at the Biological Computer Laboratory (1968-74). In 1968, he participated in the ground-breaking exhibition “Cybernetic Serendipity” at London’s Institute of Contemporary Arts.
Throughout the 1970s, 80s, and mid 90s, while remaining on the University of Illinois faculty (Professor Emeritus 1987), Brün held residencies and guest professorships around the world most notably at Ohio State University (1969-70), the Hochschule der Kunst and Technische Universtat, Berlin (Summer 1978), and Gesamthochschule Kassel (1989). From 1980, he toured and taught with the Performers' Workshop Ensemble, a group he founded. His awards and honors include an honorary doctorate from the University of Frankfurt, one prize from the International Society of Bassists, (1977), and the Norbert Wiener medal from the American Society for Cybernetics 1993. He helped found the School for Designing Society in 1993 and taught there through the year 2000. Brün wrote and spoke incisively on the social and political significance of composition and on the tendencies of language to preempt thought. He died in Urbana, Illinois in the year 2000. Visit rarenestgallery.com to view additional archives or to listen to Herbert's performances.
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