Timeline

1969-70

Access

Ralph Hocking founds Student Experiments in Television at Binghamton University to provide access to portable video equipment to students and the wider University as well as the regional community, which had previously not been able to use television gear.

Angel St. Nunez tapes Bedford Stuyvesant Kids, young men arrested after a factory break-in. WNET and WGBH air sections of it in 1971, and the tapes help seed a Fresh Air Fund for inner-city youth.

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1970-71
1971-72

Paik and Abe

NYSCA funds the Paik/Abe Video Synthesizer. Shuya Abe and Nam June Paik build one at the Center in 1972, and it runs on site long enough to make part of Paik’s The Selling of New York before heading to WNET’s TV Lab. A second machine stays for residents, with showings at the Bonino Gallery in New York and the Everson Museum in Syracuse.

At the Everson in February 1972, Paik and Charlotte Moorman exhibit TV Bed and TV Cello, both designed and built by Ralph Hocking. The Center takes its name: Experimental Television Center.

Artists in Residence
Ernie Gehr, Hollis Frampton, Jackson MacLow, Nicholas Ray, Nam June Paik, Shuya Abe, Charlotte Moorman
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1972-73

Works from ETC

Walter Wright takes electronic-imaging workshops across New York and Canada, including the Everson and The Kitchen.

Works from the Experimental Television Center, a large show built for the Everson, gathers installations, tapes and performances. Community and artist tapes air weekly on the Center’s own Access series.

Artists in Residence
Tom DeWitt, Bill T. Jones, Arnie Zane, John Reilly, Rudi Stern, Peer Bode, Walter Wright
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1973-74
1974-75

The Jones Colorizer

NYSCA funds the Jones Colorizer, a four-channel voltage-controlled colorizer with gray level keyers, and the oscillator bank is installed. Don McArthur builds the SAID digitizer out of time-base-corrector research, and Jones, McArthur and Wright begin computer imaging on an LSI-11.

Image-processing workshops and performances run at The Kitchen, Anthology Film Archives and the Contemporary Art Museum in Montreal, with Wright touring for NYSCA through more than ten organizations.

Artists in Residence
Neil Zusman, Gary Hill, Walter Wright
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1975-76

Cloud Music

An NEA grant opens the computer-video work; Jones, McArthur, Wright and Brewster fold in parallel research by Woody and Steina Vasulka and Jeffrey Schier, and the LSI-11 becomes the standard.

Jones builds hard and soft keyers and a sequential switcher, and a 64-point switching matrix goes in. The Center starts writing the manual that will grow from a portapak guide into signal theory and step-by-step builds. Cloud Music by Robert Watts, David Behrman and Bob Diamond is presented at the Center.

Artists in Residence
Nam June Paik, Phil Jones, Ken Marsh, Ken Jacobs
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1976-77

Video by Videomakers

The Center starts Video by Videomakers, the only video exhibition series in the region, bringing Beryl Korot, Barbara Buckner and others to present and talk.

The computer is installed in the system and opened to artists, and software research begins. For a second year, workshops run in regional school districts with Binghamton’s Roberson Center.

Artists in Residence
Barbara Buckner, Aldo Tambellini, Nam June Paik, American Dance Asylum
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1977-78

Steering the image

Jones and Richard Brewster build the Analog Control Box, producing electronic sound and signals that move the picture by hand. The computer project advances with Paul Davis of SUNY-Binghamton.

The Center runs workshops for the City of Binghamton, Headstart, Tri-Cities Opera and 4-H, on the principle that the tools mean nothing if no one outside the studio can reach them.

Artists in Residence
Shalom Gorewitz, Sara Hornbacher, Hank C. Linhart, Hank Rudolph
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1979-80
1980-81

The electronic darkroom

Jones writes the Print Program, which captures videographic stills to disk and prints them with fine gray-level control. It is the electronic darkroom artists here had wanted since the early seventies. Graduate interns add software under Paul Davis and Ralph Hocking.

Artists in Residence
Dan Reeves, Jon Hilton, Celia Shapiro, Peter D'Agostino
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1981-82
1982-83
1983-84

The Four Board

Jones and Matthew Schlanger design the Four Board project, a four-channel colorizer, keyers, a programmable sequencer and oscillators. The point is a complete low-cost system an artist could leave able to build for themselves. The Center begins studying the new Amiga.

Artists in Residence
Shigeko Kubota, Paul Garrin, Arthur Tsuchiya
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1984-85

Tools to take home

The Four Board project is finished and installed. Jones and Schlanger write the documentation with Connie Coleman and Alan Powell, and the manual is revised to explain keying, colorization and switching, so the methods outlast the machines.

Artists in Residence
Merrill Aldighieri, Joe Tripician, David Blair, Peter Rose, Kathy High
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1985-86

Premiere at The Kitchen

The Four Board project premieres at the Media Alliance Annual Conference at The Kitchen, the downtown space central to video art since the early seventies. NYSCA funds a black-and-white frame buffer by Jones and Peer Bode for the Amiga.

Artists in Residence
Linda Gibson, Lee Eiferman, Richard Kostelanetz, Megan Roberts, Ray Ghirardo
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1986-87

Onto the Amiga

The Print Program is rebuilt for the Amiga, and custom software lets the computer drive the frame buffer; NYSCA support adds gen-lock and memory. The work is going digital without giving up the analog instruments that gave it its look.

Artists in Residence
Irit Batsry, Jon Burris, Phil Edelstein, Alex Hahn, Michael Schell, Mary Ann Toman, Charlie Woodman
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1987-88
1988-89

Funding the work

The Center starts the Electronic Arts Grants Program with NYSCA: Presentation Funds for venues showing electronic art, Finishing Funds for artists completing work. It is now paying for other people’s work across the state, not only making its own. The audio side adds a Mirage and mixing, and MIDI and control-voltage boxes begin.

Artists in Residence
Laurie Beth Clark, Peter Callas, Vanalyne Green, Jon Knecht, Sherry Millner
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1989-1990

Sound and image, arrayed

Megan Roberts and Ray Ghirardo design a digital interface that drives several audio and video sources at once, arranged in three-dimensional space for installation.

Finishing Funds support Maria Beatty, Barbara Hammer and John Knecht, chosen by Raymond Ghirardo and Arthur Tsuchiya. Presentation Funds reach Hallwalls, Downtown Community TV Center, the Brooklyn Museum and the Asian American Video Festival.

Artists in Residence
Benton Bainbridge, Kevin Cook, Francis James, Bianca Bob Miller, Eva Schicker
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1990-1991

Grand Prix at Locarno

A third Amiga and the Toaster expand the system.

Tapes show at the Museum of Modern Art (Exchange of Information), Visual Studies Workshop, the Bronx Museum’s Emerging Expressions Biennial, and festivals in Rome, Bonn, Osnabruck, Stockholm and Turkey, and air on The Learning Channel and Deep Dish TV. Artists take the Grand Prix at Locarno and first prize for short experimental work at Athens. The Center sponsors Alex Hahn’s The Kirchner Itinerary and Shalom Gorewitz’s Roots and Branches.

Artists in Residence
Mara Alper, Irit Batsry, Alan Berliner, Laurie Beth Clark, Peter D’Agostino, Tami Gold, Brian Goldfarb, Shalom Gorewitz, Alex Hahn, Philip Mallory Jones, Richard Kostelanetz, Barbara Rosenthal, Ann Wooster
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1991-92

Wax wins

David Blair’s Wax takes the Grand Prize at the 6th Montbeliard Video Festival. Works by Irit Batsry, David Blair, Nancy Buchanan and Shalom Gorewitz screen at the Museum of Modern Art, with more at the Wexner Center, CEPA, the Brooklyn Museum, the Dallas and Black Maria festivals and the London Film Festival.

Prompted by Ars Electronica’s Pioneers of Electronic Art exhibition at Linz, the Center starts cataloging its tapes, tools and papers in a relational database, an early sign it sees itself as a history worth keeping.

Artists in Residence
Irit Batsry, Jon Burris, Shalom Gorewitz, Pamela Jennings, Cheryl Jackson, Joel Katz, Trish Rosen, Kate Farrell, Kathleen Ruiz
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1992-93

Two Decades

The Museum of Modern Art mounts three shows with Center work: Two Decades, Video Fest Berlin and Between Word and Image. More screens at the MIT Media Lab, the Franklin Institute and the DAAD Galerie in Berlin, and in the Bonn, Atlanta, Vancouver and Worldwide (Netherlands) festivals.

Finishing Funds back Maria Beatty, Kit Fitzgerald, Jeffrey Lerer, Ned Sublette and Ann-Sargent Wooster.

Artists in Residence
Emily Breer, Laurence Brose, Alex Hahn, Bianca Bob Miller, Ray Rapp, Van McElwee, Alan Sondheim, Jud Yalkut
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1993-94

Into the museums

Artists in Residence
Alan Berliner, Sandi DuBowski, Sara Hornbacher, Robert Natowitz, Tatiana Louriero, Andrea Mancuso, Peter D'Auria
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1994-95

Exit Art to Helsinki

Work shows at Exit Art, the New Museum, Hallwalls, Colgate, the Black Maria festival, the New York Video Festival, the Copenhagen Film Festival and the 5th International Symposium of Electronic Art in Helsinki.

Finishing Funds panelists Bob Harris and Steina Vasulka support Tom DeWitt, Carl Geiger and Amy Hufnagel, Jody Lafond, Rohesia Hamilton Metcalfe, Kristin Tripp and Cathy Weis.

Artists in Residence
Veena Cabreros-Sud, Lisa DiLillo, Genevieve Hayes, Barbara Hammer, Dave Ryan, Debra Robinson, Sui Kang Zhao
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1995-96

ISEA Montreal

Work shows at the Whitney, Threadwaxing Space, the Donnell Media Center, the Knitting Factory and Momenta Art, and travels to the 6th International Symposium on Electronic Art in Montreal and to Video Data Bank’s Video: The First Decade.

Finishing Funds, picked by Peer Bode and Ken Jacobs, back Alan Berliner, Diane Bertolo, Bill and Mary Buchen, Jane Greenberg, John Knecht, Richard Kostelanetz and Jeanne Liotta.

Artists in Residence
Mara Alper, Kjell Bjorgeengen, Barbara Columbo, Michael Betancourt, Andrew Deutsch, Linda Gibson, John Knecht, Kristin Lucas, Darrin Martin, Diane Nerwen, Reynold Weidenaar
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1996-97

Lucas at the Whitney

Kristin Lucas’s Host is selected for the Whitney Biennial and shows at the Museum of Modern Art and the New York Film and Video Festival at Lincoln Center. Mary Ann Petit takes first prize at Thaw 96. Resident work shows at the AFI Video Festival, LACMA, the Boston MFA and the MIX Festival.

Presentation Funds put independent video in front of nearly forty thousand people across twenty counties. Sponsored documentaries include Slawomir Grunberg and Ben Crane’s School Prayer: A Community Divided and Barbara Hammer’s The Female Closet.

Artists in Residence
Gretchen Bender, Daniel Cooney, Xiomin Gu, Laura Parnes, Jed Speare, Charlie Woodman
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1997-98

Landscape: Mediated Views

Residents represent seven states, Finland and Canada. Peer Bode’s untitled pieces are selected for the Osnabruck Video Festival, and Leah Gilliam and Janet Grau complete new tapes.

Tapes show at the AFI Video Festival, the MIX Festival, the Museum of Modern Art and the ICA Boston, and the Center is invited to curate Landscape: Mediated Views for Visual Studies Workshop. Susan Muska’s The Brandon Teena Story wins two Astraea awards.

Artists in Residence
Mara Alper, Sara Hornbacher, Kristin Lucas, Jillian McDonald, Rohesia Metcalfe, Bianca Miller, Mary Ann Petit, Barbara Sternberg, Jed Speare, Kristin Tripp, Sue Wrbican, Neil Zusman
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1998-99

Making Connections

The Center runs Video History: Making Connections at Syracuse in October 1998, drawing over 250 people and tying the seventies pioneers to a younger generation in new media. Forty-eight residents work in the studio; Alex Hahn’s Theater of Memory tours Zurich, Oberhausen and Berlin.

Tapes show at the Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney, the New Museum and the Black Maria and MIX festivals. Sponsored projects include Alan Berliner’s The Language of Names, David Blair’s The Telepathic Motion Picture of the Lost Tribe, Barbara Hammer’s Culture Doctor, and a Peer Bode, Joseph Scheer and Jessie Shefrin installation.

Artists in Residence
Juan Alonso, Torsten Burns, Terry Cuddy, Lisa DiLillo, Phil Galanter, Jolie Guy, David Knoebel, Darrin Martin, Megan Michalak, Cara O'Connor, Laura Parnes, Cindy Penter, Liselot van der Heijden
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1999-2000

Batsry at Rotterdam

Irit Batsry’s These Are Not My Images premieres at the Rotterdam festival. John Knecht curates Motion at the Munson-Williams-Proctor Institute, a tape survey honoring 25 years of residents. Work shows at the Whitney Biennial, the Museum of Modern Art and the New Museum, and in the Black Maria and MIX festivals.

The Center launches the Video History Web and passes $600,000 in grants awarded since 1989. Sponsored work includes Slawomir Grunberg’s Emmy-winning School Prayer, Alan Berliner’s The Sweetest Sound, David Blair’s Lost Tribe and Barbara Hammer’s The Female Closet. Finishing Funds back Zoe Beloff, Brian Frye, Neil Goldberg, Barbara Hammer, Jody LaFond, Ken Montgomery and Diane Nerwen.

Artists in Residence
Matt Biedermann, Peer Bode, Yael Braha, Greg Bowman, Torsten Burns, Lynn Cazabon, Graham Collins, Tim Dallett, Lisa DiLillo, Robert Doyle, Sarah Drury, Brendan Earley, Raymond Ghirardo, Nancy Golden, Jackie Goss, Alex Hahn, Susan Hamovich, Genevieve De Monvel Hayes, Pamela Susan Hawkins, Janene Higgins, Sara Hornbacher, Jody LaFond, Kaelo La Belle, Kristin Lucas, Mary Magsamen, Dena Mermelstein, Cara O'Connor, Bob Paris, Megan Roberts, Lynne Pidel, Ron Rocco, Mary Ross, Lynne Sachs, E Jessie Shefrin, Alan Sondheim, Jed Speare, Jim Supanick, Diane Teramana, Liselot van der Heijden, Julius Vitali, Walter Wright, Jud Yalkut
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2000-2001

To the Whitney

Irit Batsry wins the Bucksbaum Award and a place in the 2002 Whitney Biennial for Neither There Nor Here, one of the largest prizes in American art. The Center supports Ken Jacobs’s NY Ghetto Fishmarket, 1903, Amy Jenkins’s Shelter for Daydreaming at the John Michael Kohler Art Center, and Branda Miller’s Kids in Formation.

Fifty residents from eleven states show at the Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney, Anthology Film Archives, The Kitchen and Art in General, and in the NY Video Festival and the Dumbo festival. For Black Box at New Jersey City University, the Center curates 30 years of work made on its machines. Finishing Funds back Luca Buvoli, Jeanne Liotta, Mary Magsamen, Jennifer and Kevin McCoy, Eric Rosenzveig and others.

Artists in Residence
Mara Alper, Stephan Apicella-Hitchcock, Bebe Beard, Peer Bode, Yael Braha, Elinore Burke, Torsten Burns, Lynn Cazabon, Graham Collins, Bob Doyle, Nicholas Economos, David Franklin, Lilah Freeland, Raymond Ghirardo, Sandra Gibson, Leah Gilliam, Nancy Golden, Alex Hahn, Pamela Susan Hawkins, Sorrel Hays, Sara Hornbacher, Tom Kehn, Jinhan Ko, Kaleo LaBelle, Jody Lafond, Todd Lefelt, Jeanne Liotta, Kristin Lucas, Darrin Martin, Kristine Marx, Jillian McDonald, Bianca Bob Miller, Michael Pope, Blithe Riley, Megan Roberts, Ron Rocco, Mary Ross, Dean Snell, Alan Sondheim, Jed Speare, Jim Supanick, Kristin Tripp, Liselot van der Heijden, Julius Vitali, Dan Walsh, Virgil Wong, Charlie Woodman, Ann Sargent Wooster, Jud Yalkut, Angela Zorzi
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2001-2002

At the Pompidou

Center work reaches the Centre Pompidou in Paris and MoMA’s Video Viewpoints. After the towers fell, the studio turned outward, from the From The Ashes benefit of over 100 artists to a run of funded projects.

NYSCA awards go to Barbara Hammer for Resisting Paradise, Ken Jacobs for N.Y. Ghetto Fishmarket 1903, Kristin Lucas for Supervision, Jeffrey Lerer and Joseph Scheer. Finishing Funds back Zoe Beloff, Abigail Child and Benton Bainbridge, Julia Loktev, Kathleen Ruiz, Mary Ellen Strom and the Yes Men. In June the Center convenes Looking Back/Looking Forward at Downtown Community TV, gathering 60 conservators and artists on moving-image preservation.

Artists in Residence
Mara Alper, Stephan Apicella-Hitchcock, Benton Bainbridge, Irit Batsry, Kjell Bjorgeengen, Peer Bode, Anney Bonney, Yael Braha, Torsten Burns, Graham Collins, Tim Dallett, Ghen Zando Dennis, Hayley Downs, Nicholas Economos, Unn Fahlstrom, Nancy Golden, Pamela Hawkins, Janene Higgins, Sara Hornbacher, Jody Lafond, Kristin Lucas, Darrin Martin, Rohesia Metcalfe, Bianca Bob Miller, Aaron Miller, Chris Musgrave, Tarja Nieminen, Lara Odell, Shawn Onsgard, Blithe Riley, Ron Rocco, Frank Shifreen, Jed Speare, Jim Supanick, Diane Teramana, Julius Vitali, Reynold Weidenaar, Charles Woodman, Ann Sargent Wooster, Jud Yalkut, Robert York, Neil Zusman
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2002-2003

The hybrid studio

The studio becomes a single instrument: old analog synthesizers wired to Max/MSP and Jitter so an artist moves between them without leaving the patch bay. Fifty-eight residents work in it.

NYSCA awards go to Ariana Gerstein for Milk, Jacqueline Goss for Kishlak Dwellers (premiered at Eyebeam), Jeanne Liotta for Observando el Cielo, and Jenny Perlin for Perseverance and How to Develop It (Rotterdam, Ann Arbor jury award). Work shows at MoMA, the New Museum, Art in General, PS 1 and the Barcelona CCCB. The Center issues the CD Early Media Instruments and shows it in Origins at the Cyberfest in Boston.

Artists in Residence
Mara Alper, Michael Betancourt, Bebe Beard, Peer Bode, Jon Cates, Sarawut Chutiwongpeti, Caroline Koebel, Graham Collins, Carrie Dashow, Aaron Davidson, Melissa Dubbin, Maria Dumlao, Monica Duncan, Erica Eaton, Nicholas Economos, Raymond Ghirardo, Ronald Gladkowski, Nancy Golden, Tyler Gooden, Alex Hahn, Jennifer Hamilton, Pamela Hawkins, Sachiko Hayashi, Karen Hibbard, Sara Hornbacher, Shaun Irons, Katarina Jerinic, Istvan Kantor, George Kindel, Meg Knowles, Shirin Kouladje, Annie Langan, Elodie Lauten, Darrin Martin, Laura McGough with Steve Bradley, Lori Anderson Moseman, Chris Musgrave, Lara Odell, Monica Pansarino, Lauren Petty, Blithe Riley, Patricia Riske, Megan Roberts, Ron Rocco, Rebekah Rutkoff, Lindsay Sampson, Jon Satrom, Kurt Schultz, Devlin Shea, Rachel Siegel, Frank Shifreen, Don Simmons, Jason Simon, Alan Sondheim, Jed Speare, Jim Supanick, Liselot van der Heijden, Angel Vasquez, Julius Vitali, Tobaron Waxman, Tony Weathers
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2003-2004

At the Venice Biennale

Center work shows at the Venice Biennale, the New York Film Festival and Viper in Basel, about as far into the international art world as electronic video had reached. Since 1971 more than fourteen hundred artists have worked in the studio.

NYSCA awards go to Alan Berliner for Wide Awake, Leah Gilliam for Agenda, Barbara Hammer for Sisters/Resisters, Amy Jenkins for We, Precarious, Megan Roberts and Raymond Ghirardo for Rain/Fall, Nick Economos for Book Tick and Shawn Onsgard for Ghost in the Oat Bin. The Center applies to Cornell to place digitized 1969-1980 materials into the Rose Goldsen Archive, and the National Television and Video Preservation Foundation backs remastering ten hours of its 1970s tapes.

Artists in Residence
Mara Alper, Kristin Anchor, Sara Ayers, Christopher Barker, Bebe Beard, Kjell Bjorgeengen, Peer Bode, Anney Bonney, Debora Brown, Torsten Zena Burns, Lili Chin, Joe Diebes, Rebecca Dolan, Maria Dumlao, Monica Duncan, Erica Eaton, Scott Fitzgerald, Raymond Ghirardo, Suzanne Goldenberg, Alex Hahn, Barbara Hammer, Michelle Handelman, Pamela Hawkins, Kathy High, Tali Hinkis and Kyle Lapidus (LoVid), Sara Hornbacher, Jecca, Zohar Kfir, Judge Kindel, Meg Knowles, Wago Kreider, Annie Langan, Kristin Lucas, Mary Magsamen and Stephen Hillerbrand, Darrin Martin, Jillian McDonald, Brian Milbrand, Bianca Bob Miller, Monica Panzarino, John Phillips, Joanna Raczynska, Jennifer Reeder, Joseph Reinsel, Megan Roberts, Ron Rocco, Lynne Sachs, Luciana Sanz, Devlin Shea, Suzie Silver, Alan Sondheim, Jed Speare, Simon Tarr, Julia Tell, Termite TV, Julius Vitali, Josh Weinstein, Bart Woodstrup, Matt Biederman, Walter Wright, Jud Yalkut, Neil Zusman
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2004-2005

The studio as instrument

The studio now holds devices built by David Jones, Dan Sandin and Nam June Paik, vintage and new synthesizers, Max/MSP and Jitter, keyers, switchers and cameras, all on one patch bay. It is an archive of video-art tools an artist can play. The tenth International Summer Workshop runs.

Center work shows at the New York Film Festival, the Venice Biennale, the Dallas Video Festival and Viper. NYSCA awards go to Irit Batsry, Abigail Child for By Desire, Norman Cowie, Jeffrey Lerer, Jim Supanick and Caspar Stracke; Greta Olafsdottir and Susan Muska get McCarthy support for America is Hard to Find. The Center digitizes interviews with Woody Vasulka, Steve Rutt, Dan Sandin, Ralph Hocking, David Jones and Walter Wright.

Artists in Residence
Mara Alper, Phyllis Baldino, Rene Beekman, Stephan Belovarich, Kjell Bjorgeengen, Debora Brown, Jubal Brown, Torsten Zena Burns, Pablo Caolpinto, Heather Delaney, Hayley Downs, Monica Duncan, Brendan Ford, Madeleine Gallagher, David Barker, Raymond Ghirardo, Pamela Hawkins, Kathy High, Sara Hornbacher, Jitter Working Group, Zohar Kfir, Annie Langan, Kent Lundberg, Mary Magsamen, Stephen Hillerbrand, Darrin Martin, Brian Milbrand, Courtney Grim, Bianca Bob Miller, Toban Nichols, John Phillips, Joe Reinsel, Ron Rocco, Luciana Sanz, Amoeba Technology, Frank Shifreen, Gretchen Skogerson, Jim Supanick, Julia Tell, Julius Vitali, Ann Sargent Wooster, Roger Wyatt, Jud Yalkut, Neil Zusman
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2005-2006

At LACMA

Center work shows at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and at festivals in Zurich and Basel, moving easily between American museums and the European circuit. The eleventh International Summer Workshop runs with the Institute for Electronic Arts.

NYSCA awards go to Benton Bainbridge and Stephen Moore for Video Quilt, LoVid (Tali Hinkis and Kyle Lapidus) for Cross Current Resonance Transducer, and Igor Vamos for Chilling Effects, on the prosecution of Critical Art Ensemble’s Steven Kurtz. Finishing Funds reach 28 projects, among them work by Jung Hee Choi, Marie Losier, Tara Mateik, Esther Robinson and Jason Varone.

Artists in Residence
Mara Alper, Benton Bainbridge, Stephan Moore, Ann Bennett, Caitlin Berrigan, Debora Brown, Torsten Burns, Kari Catske, Evangelos Courpas, Terry Cuddy, Eleanor Dubinsky, Maria Dumlao, Renate Ferro, Scott Fitzgerald, Brendan Ford, Madeleine Gallagher, David Barker, Raymond Ghirardo, Megan Roberts, Pamela Hawkins, Nadia Hironaki, Sara Hornbacher, Thomas Hufford, Richard Kostelanetz, Matt Underwood, Bosung Kim, Zohar Kfir, David Kwan, Annie Langan, Jason Livingston, Cynthia Lovett, Craig Marsden, Darrin Martin, Jeffrey Martin, Christina McPhee, Marianne Petit, John Phillips, Magaly Ponce, Ron Rocco, Bernard Roddy, Mike Rosenthal, Paul Rowley, Luciana Sanz, Caspar Stracke, Fereshteh Toosi, Paris Treantafeles, Robert Martinez, Dan Vatsky, Bryan Wolf, Roger Wyatt, Tarmara Yadao, Neil Zusman
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2006-2007

Lessons from a Video Master

Skip Blumberg’s Lessons From a Video Master gathers the advice Nam June Paik passed to more than 65 artists. NYSCA awards also go to Peer Bode for History Electronic, Barbara Hammer for The Diving Women of Jeju-do, Aaron Miller for Terminus, Paul Rowley for Uisce Marbh, Luciana Sanz for Etcetera and Caspar Stracke for Architecture of Piracy.

Work shows at Eyebeam, the Corcoran, the Museum of Modern Art, the Film Society of Lincoln Center and the Kunstmuseum Solothurn, and in the VideoEx (Zurich), Viper (Basel) and Jerusalem festivals. Finishing Funds back Zoe Beloff, Carrie Dashow, Mariam Ghani, Jason Livingston, Cat Mazza and Marina Zurkow, among others.

Artists in Residence
99 Hooker, Mara Alper, Nurit Bar-shai, Matt Biederman, Kjell Bjorgeengen, Peer Bode, Tammy Renee Brackett, Debora Brown, Yvonne Buchanan, Carrie Dashow, Andrew Demirjian, Carola Dreidemie, Monica Duncan, Nic Economos, Brendan Ford, Madeleine Gallagher, Jaclyn Genga, Raymond Ghirardo, Megan Roberts, Nick Hallett, Pamela Hawkins, Kelly Jacobson, Zohar Kfir, Wojciech Kosma, Richard Kostelanetz, Matt Underwood, Justin Lincoln, Jason Livingston, Cleoni Manoussakis, Craig Marsden, Kristin Marx, Aaron Miller, Bianca Miller, Branda Miller, Marisa Olson, Rebekkah Palov, Jackie Passmore, John Phillips, Mike Rosenthal, Liz Rodda, Joshua Rosenstock, Luciana Sanz, Jennifer Schmidt, Ray Sweeten, Lisellot van der Heijden, Charles Woodman, Roger Wyatt, Necole Zayatz
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2007-2008

Migrating Media

Ken Jacobs gets NYSCA support for The Alps and the Jews, a 3-D portrait of Allied strategy; awards also go to Vincent Grenier, Amy Jenkins, Kristine Marx, Brian Milbrand and Alan Sondheim. Work shows at Lincoln Center, the Museum of Modern Art, the Chelsea Art Museum and CEPA, and in Beyond/In Western New York, Ars Electronica and the Stuttgart festival.

At the 2007 Association of Moving Image Archivists conference, Jim Lindner of Media Matters donates a SAMMA Solo, and the Center launches Migrating Media with Buffalo Media Resources and Hallwalls to migrate endangered upstate video collections.

Artists in Residence
Mara Alper, Kristen Anchor, Nurit Bar-Shai, Jack Beck and Matt Costanza, Eyal Nen-Zwi, Kjell Bjorgeengen, Peer Bode, Torsten Burns, Zarah Cabanas, Andrew Demirjian, Emile Devereaux, Rebecca Dolan, Unn Fahlstrom, Brendan Ford, Axel Forrester, Madeleine Gallagher, Alex Hahn, Sarah Halpern, Sachiko Hayashi, Carolyn Kane, Brett Kashmere and Astria Suparak, Peter Kerlin and Anna Sperber, Zohar Kfir, Kim Kielhofner, Zach Layton, Justin Lincoln, Kristin Lucas, Darrin Martin, Bianca Miller, Monica Panzarino, John Phillips, Magaly Ponce, Adi Shniderman and Merav Ezer, Jeremy Slater, Matt Underwood and Jenny Hyde, Tor van Eijk, Sheri Wills, Dan Winckler
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2008-2009

Propitious stars

Over fifty residents from eleven states, the UK and Canada work in the studio. NYSCA awards go to Alex Hahn for Propitious Stars and the Master of the Staring Eyes, Skip Blumberg for a Paik sequel, Courtney Grim for Eerie Tales, Shawn Lawson for Our Sardanapalus, LoVid for Orbital Drop, Monteith McCollum for Path, Laura Parnes for County Down and Gretchen Skogerson for Parking Signs.

Work shows at SF MoMA, Light Industry, the Villa Croce in Genoa, Hallwalls and Eyebeam, and in the MIX, European Media Art (Osnabruck) and Migrating Forms festivals. The New York State Media Arts Map launches at Location One. The Finishing Funds panel includes Renate Ferro and Tara Mateik.

Artists in Residence
Rahne Alexander, Mara Alper, Kristen Anchor, Nurit Bar-Shai, Bebe Beard, Katherine Behar, Ann Bennett, Allison Berkoy, Nick Bontrager, Debora Brown, Toby Buhler, Torsten Burns, Dearraindrop, Paul Donoghue, Carola Dreidemie, David Foedel, Brendan Ford, Larry Gartel, Sabina Gruffat, Alex Hahn, Sarah Halpern, Allison Holt, Sara Hornbacher, Chika Iijima, Deborah Johnson with Siebren Versteeg and Ben Vida, Seth Kirby and Brock Monroe, Caroline Koebel, Zach Layton, Katherine Liberovskya, Justin Lincoln, Kristin Lucas, Tara Mateik, Benoit Maubray, Pete McPartland, Evan Meaney, Sang Um Nam, Marisa Olson, Ben Owen, Monica Panzarino, John Phillips, Megan Roberts and Ray Ghirardo, Kathleen Rugh, Luke Schantz, Samantha Silver, Phil Stearns, Fereshteh Toosi, Justin Wiggan, Roger Wyatt, Frances Young
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2009-2010

Forty Years

The Center releases Experimental Television Center: 1969-2009, an eighteen hour, five-DVD set with a 130-page catalog. LUX, the influential arts organization in London, UK, names it as one of 50 essential moving-image DVDs in publication.

Forty-seven residents from thirteen states and four countries work in the studio. NYSCA awards go to Benton Bainbridge for Brother Island, Alan Berliner for Arithmetic, Janet Biggs for Fade to White, Ken Jacobs for The Nervous System, Jason Livingston for Interstate, and Susan Muska and Greta Olafsdottir for Edie & Thea. Work shows at Light Industry, Hallwalls and Eyebeam, and in festivals from Toronto to Yogyakarta.

Artists in Residence
Mara Alper, Kristen Anchor, Elise Baldwin, Marko Bandobranski, Allison Berkoy, Kjell Bjorgeengen, Jenna Bliss, Peter Byrne, Lana Caplan, Juan Cisneros, Cecelia Dougherty, Carola Dreidemie, Darren Floyd, Benj Gerdes, Tim Geraghty, Alex Hahn, Pamela Hawkins, Allison Holt, Sara Hornbacher, Peter Kerlin, Meg Knowles, Katherine Liberovskaya, Justin Lincoln, Terese Longva, Al Margolis, Timm Mason, Brian Milbrand, Lee Montgomery, Jared Nielsen, Rebekka Palov, Laura Paolini, Blithe Riley, Julie Rooney, Kamran Sadeghi, Luke Schantz, Tomas Stark, Samuael Topiary, Matt Underwood, Roger Wyatt, Frances Young, Dustin Semel, Greg Zifcak
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2010-2011

A pause to reflect

Forty-nine residents work in the studio before the Center ends the Residency, the Grants, and the Sponsorship programs in summer 2011 to focus on history and preservation. NYSCA awards go to Jacqueline Goss for The Observers, Barbara Hammer for Maya Deren’s Sink (a Teddy at the Berlinale), and Monteith McCollum for The Good Game. Anthology Film Archives hosts a Tribute to ETC.

In April the Goldsen and FLEFF host Video Art: Practice, History, and Archive, with Renate Ferro, Sherry Miller Hocking, Philip Mallory Jones, Barbara Lattanzi and Timothy Murray.

Then the move that ends the studio era: the videotape collection and the document archive are slated to go to the Rose Goldsen Archive of New Media Art at Cornell.

Artists in Residence
Matthew Belanger, Marianne Petit, Kjell Bjorgeengen, Peer Bode, Yvonne Buchanan, Julia Christiansen, Carl Diehl, Paul Donoghue, Monica Duncan, Unn Fahlstrom, David Galbraith, Madeleine Gallagher with Adam Savje, Edward Davis, Alex Hahn, Allison Holt, Sara Hornbacher, Colleen Keough, Seth Kirby, Brock Monroe, Jason Livingston, Kristin Lucas, Timm Mason, Blair Neal, Seth Nemec, Andrew Neumann, Marisa Olson, Ed Osborn, Emily Pelstring, Sondra Perry, Leslie Raymond, Jason Stevens, James Richards, Steve Reinke, Megan Roberts, Raymond Ghirardo, Ron Rocco, David Rosfeld, Maria Watts, Audrey Molinare, Michael Sanders, Josh Solondz, Carolyn Tennant, JT Rinker, Tor van Eijk, Eli Welbourne
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2014

Early Media Instruments

The Center releases Early Media Instruments, an eight-DVD set in which Dave Jones, Hank Rudolph and Benton C Bainbridge demonstrate the real-time analog tools that defined the studio, most designed in the 1970s. One disc each for the Jones Colorizer, Frame Buffer, Keyer and Sequencer, the Paik/Abe Video Synthesizer, the Raster Manipulation Unit (the Wobbulator), the Rutt/Etra RE-4 and the Sandin Image Processor.

Documentation is by Carolyn Tennant, Pamela Susan Hawkins, Hank Rudolph, Mona Jimenez and Kathy High, with design and post by Matthew Underwood, Necole Zayatz and Dave Jones Design. The set is produced through the Video History Project.

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2015

A History, Etc.

The book lands and the museums follow. The Emergence of Video Processing Tools: Television Becoming Unglued, edited by Kathy High, Sherry Miller Hocking and Mona Jimenez, is out from Intellect; its New Museum launch (July 13, 2014) puts Dave Jones, LoVid’s Kyle Lapidus and Tali Hinkis, Rhizome’s Dragan Espenschied and Hank Rudolph in conversation, organized with Rhizome and the New Museum. IMAP marks the book and its Archiving the Arts resource with a June symposium at the Burchfield Penney in Buffalo.

Then the first academic survey of the Center: The Experimental Television Center: A History, Etc. at the Hunter College Art Galleries (September to November 2015), curated by Sarah Watson with Timothy Murray and Sherry Miller Hocking. It spans the 1960s through the 2000s with original analog instruments and new tools by Dave Jones and by Jason and Debora Bernagozzi of Signal Culture, and names the artists ETC built: Batsry, Bode, Buckner, Hammer, Hill, Kubota, Paik, the Vasulkas, Lynne Sachs, Charlotte Moorman, Arnie Zane and many more.

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2016

Signal to Code

The Center’s work fills two Cornell shows drawn from the Rose Goldsen Archive, now home to its tapes and ephemera. Signal to Code: 50 Years of Media Art runs at the Kroch Library (March to October 2016), more than sixty electronic and digital works across fifteen display stations, with the Paik/Abe Raster Manipulation Unit on view.

A companion screening at the Herbert F. Johnson Museum (September to December 2016) runs eleven works at once: Ralph Hocking’s Transparent Body #3, David Blair’s Wax, Gary Hill’s Earth Pulse, Barbara Hammer and Paula Levine’s Two Bad Daughters, Sara Hornbacher’s Writing Degree Z, Philip Mallory Jones’s First World Order, Rohesia Hamilton Metcalfe’s La Blanchisseuse, NNeng-M’s Tears, Lynne Sachs’s Window Work, Andrew Deutsch’s Magnetic North and Ann-Sargent Wooster’s Dialectics of Romance. The wall text credits the tools to Hocking, Paik, Abe, David Jones and Dan Sandin.

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2021

Fifty years, and a move

MoMA gives Shigeko Kubota her first US solo show in 25 years, Liquid Reality, with ETC contributing; one wall photo is Peer Bode’s shot of Kubota at the Center in 1983.

Then the turn. On the 50th anniversary, Sherry Hocking announces that she and Ralph have stepped back and ETC is moving to Atlanta under Erik Gavriluk, who had been working with Ralph since 2019 on the history, the tapes, and the analog instruments. The studio and hundreds of tools are now in a large Atlanta space, restoration underway, plus new programs in attribution, rights recovery and distribution.

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2023

Moon is the Oldest TV

Two returns to the founders. Amanda Kim’s documentary Nam June Paik: Moon is the Oldest TV draws research and archival material from ETC, takes a Variety Critic’s Pick, and reaches Amazon Prime, Apple TV and PBS American Masters.

And Binghamton University honors Ralph Hocking with Selected Works (February 2023), a screening and a conversation with Peer Bode and Kathy High, marking the man who started the whole thing as a campus media-access program in 1969.

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