Radio art

Radio art refers to the use of radio for art.

The artist who works in Radio Art is not necessarily a trained DJ, programmer, producer, or engineer, but one who uses sound to make art. The radio medium can be used in ways which are different from what it was intended for.[1]

In that sense, the way the message is transmitted and received by an audience is as important as the message itself. "As an aural art form it reaffirms that it's not just what we say, but the way we say it." [2] In Victoria Fenner's words, "Radio art is art which is specifically composed for the medium of radio and is uniquely suited to be transmitted via the airwaves." [3]

Artists use radio technology (i.e. radio transmission, airwaves...) to communicate artistic compositions for interpretation – exposing their audience to alternate means to experiencing their art through sound verses visualization. Radio Art contributes to new media art - a digitally driven art movement growing in response to the informative technological revolution we live in. “From the artist's point of view radio is an environment to be entered into and acted upon, a site for various cultural voices to meet, converse, and merge in. These artists cross disciplines, raid all genres and recontextualize them into hybrids.” [2]

Radio Art projects can be collaborative including various professional sources, unifying an audio broadcast with science, experimentation, geography, entertainment, etc." Some have approached radio as an architectural space to be constructed sonically and linguistically; or as the site of an event, an arena, or stage. Some used it as a gathering place, or a conduit, a means to create community. Other artists have employed the media landscape itself as the narrative, while others looked into the body as the site and the source; the voicebox, the larynx become medium and metaphor." [2]

Origins

Medium

This list is a summary of the examples found in the references accompanying this article.

Radio Art media:

Radio Waves, Satellites, Synthesized Speech, Human Vocals, Radio Telescopes, Computers, World Wide Web, Sound Equipment

Styles/Genres

This list is a summary of the examples found in the references accompanying this article.

Traditional genres of Radio Art include:

radio documentary, radio drama, soundscape, sound art, electroacoustic music, sound poetry, performance, open source, translation, interviews, audio galleries, soundscape, sound art, electroacoustic music, sound poetry intended for the radio, spoken word, concerts, experimental narratives, sonic geographies, pseudo documentaries, radio cinema, conceptual and multimedia performances intended for the radio.

Art radio and webradio

An art radio is a radio station that would dedicate every second of its transmission time to radio art. Although this kind of project can seem utopian in the traditional state of radio, there are few lasting experiences in the underground or community side such as London's ResonanceFM which intend to make radio with art and promote the art of listening.

Also, radio had renewed itself through the Internet. The audio streaming technique had replaced the analogue transmitting system and artists can experiment on radio outside the legal constraints of an FM license for example. Among the webradios which are dedicated to radio art, some broadcast pieces like traditional radios. Some others directly experiment with the medium in the more concrete sense. Radio Astronomy[4] broadcast sounds taken from outer space in real time. Le Poulpe[5] is a networking experimental radio that mix several "spaces" processed and streamed through the Internet. Besides, podcasting can be considered as a new way of broadcasting, thus a new way of bringing radio art to listeners. Of the on-demand kind, SilenceRadio.org[6] is a website which publish sound pieces which explore the different genres of radio art or intend to question the manners of making radio art today. The Ràdio Web MACBA[7] Curatorial series[8] also experiments with the radio art format.

"The origins of radio are deeply rooted in a very idealistic socialist potential to provide the communication necessary to connect people across space and time. At the beginning of the 20th century, radio was the equivalent to the Internet today in terms of its social as well as political possibilities. However, its development into a highly hierarchical system with expensive licensing fees and severe punishments for violations of these laws in order to protect certain industries has resulted in radio space being controlled by guardians of commerce. Radio licensing laws are concerned with the protection of copyrighted material. Radio has the potential to be a completely liberated, mobile and inhabited mass media." [1]

Radio Art Experiments and Project Examples

Transversal Performance
By: Jacques Foschia and Tetsuo Kogawa
A streaming and networked feedback performance between Jacques Foschia (Brussels) and Tetsuo Kogawa (Tokyo).

Free Radio Linux
By: Radioqualia
Free Radio Linux was an open source, performance and sound project. A kind of spoken-word performance, where a programmed “speech.bot” (software that converts text into a synthesized human voice) was to recite all 4,141,432 lines of the source code of the kernel, or core, of the Linux operating system.

Switch Off
by Magz Hall
explores possible futures of FM analogue radio through the spectrum of radio art practice. http://magzhall.wordpress.com/

LINES OF SIGHT #7. Radio Incarné. Yasunao Tone and Tetsuo Kogawa
By: Barbara Held and Pilar Subirà
A collaboration by the philosopher and pioneer of mini FM radio, Tetsuo Kogawa (Tokyo), and sound artist and exFluxus Yasunao Tone (New York), based on an email exchange on radioart.

Radio Arts www.radioarts.org.uk

Radio Arts is an independent artists’ group who promote radio as a site for creative experimentation. The collective started in 2001 in South London by radio and sound artists Magz Hall and Jim Backhouse with digital artists Tim Pickup and Nicola Schauerman (Genetic Moo). Radio Arts have held public workshops, produced sound installations, led public interventions, commissioned, published and broadcast new sound works by international artists.

Radio art programs

A few examples of radio art regular programs.

Radio Papesse was born in 2006 within the Palazzo delle Papesse Contemporary Art Center, Siena, Italy. It was meant to serve as a platform wherein get in touch with contemporary art and those production at the crossroad between music, sound art, visual art and new ways of storytelling. Since January 2009 Radio Papesse has moved forward independently and it’s now a non-profit cultural association. It is member of Radia and WRA. Its aim is to associate a discourse on contemporary art and the sonic dimension of contemporary culture together with music and listenings you wouldn’t find on other radios. Radio Papesse is an open on-line and on-demand audio archive and a web radio streaming 24/7: among the easier listenings, it gives room to experimental audio productions, sound art, sound poetry and soundscapes.

Radio Art events

http://radioarts.org.uk/

"AIR / EAR" is the assembly of a radio transmission in a / a space / cultural hall of a small town in rural Argentina. Over the years my relationship with the radio, I was penetrating into the ambient sound of space around me constantly, in everyday life and transmission of these devices, like having a pair of headphones built all the time. This combination made in time I discovered the term radio art and began to investigate.

"AIR / EAR" joins two English terms related to the transmission and listening to together form a Spanish word, meaning fresh, oxygenation and giving to know one thing.

"AIR / EAR is through sound show the different ways in which the radio art grows, so by means of a call over the Internet are invited to participate in this event, transforming it into a sample collectively.

"AIR / EAR" arises to make known a new art form, the radio art through sound public places and means of communication.

http://www.bande-originale.net/%CF%80-node-la-radio-libre/

References

External links