Miroslaw Rogala

Mirosław Rogala is a Polish-born American video artist and interactive artist. He has worked in the areas of interactive art, video installation and live performance, post-photographic transformation, and musical composition.

Education

Interactive Art

Rogala's first art work to receive widespread acclaim was his Pulso-Funktory, a pre-interactive mixed media

installation created between 1975 and 1979 that contained pre-virtual interactive analogue components. An

assemblage of six panels with neon lights and electronic sound effects, it allowed for up to six viewers at a time

to interact with it by allowing them to switch between "off" and "on" settings. Although this work was produced

to fulfill requirements for a master of arts degree in painting, it prefigured the direction Rogala's art was

quickly to take. In the words of critic Frank Popper, "When Rogala moved from Poland to the United States in

1979, he remained attached to his early works, which inspired a need to search for a medium that could

synthesize the intrinsics of individual media and the desire to seamlessly cross the boundaries of each medium

without losing the intensity, density, and precision in an effort to continue the same idea in different media." [1]


Obtaining a master of arts degree in video from the Art Institute of Chicago, Rogala continue to pursue his

interest in expanded forms of interactive media. In 1994-95, he received a residency from the Zentrum für

Kunst und Medientechnologie, in Karlsruhe, Germany. The culmination was an installation entitled Lovers Leap.

Lovers Leap used two screens facing one another. The viewer's movement within the space triggered the

images to change. Rogala's photographic component was of a street in Chicago that would, if the viewer

provided the right conditions, jump or "leap" to video clips shot in Jamaica. Lovers Leap was first exhibited at

the MultiMediale 4: das Medienkunstfestival des ZKM Karlsruhe, 13-21 Mai 1995. A related CD-ROM version

followed.


Timothy Druckery has seen Lovers Leap as a major development in interactivity: "In the coupling of spatial and

narrative forms . . . the spatial becomes a sphere of activity, and the image a site of reflection." [2]Similarly,

Mark B. N. Hansen has grouped Rogala together with the artists Tamás Waliczy and Jeffrey Shaw, seeing them

as key in developing new ways to present the digitized photographic images: "By explicitly staging the shift

from the technical image to the framing function, the works of these artists literally compel us to "see" with our

bodies."[3] Or in the words of Lynn Warren, "All these images differ profoundly from a traditional photograph in

that the viewer does not merely hold (or amplify, or mutate) them in his memory after the initial, static viewing,

the viewer determines the very structure of the image by how he physically moves his body, hands, and eyes.

This is the post-photographic image."[4]


In 1996, Rogala produced Electronic Garden/NatuRealization, sometimes known as eGarden, an interactive

sound installation created and produced for Sculpture Chicago (http://www.chicagosculptureworks.com/Welco

me.html) ’96. The work was placed in the center of Washington Square Park in Chicago, a site with historic

significance as a place where soap box speakers of the early to mid-twentieth century would use their right of

free speech and expound on and debate the issues of the day. By moving through a gazebo-like structure, the

listener would trigger the playing of recordings of the words of both historic and contemporary speakers

associated with the area. Between one and four recordings might play at a time, but they would be heard only if

a visitor moved through the space. In the words of critic and theorist Sean Cubitt from his article "Miroslaw

Rogala: Public, Publicity, Publication," "The primary concern is with the process of making spaces where

democracy can be enacted, where mutuality and trust are fostered, and where the voices of the past can inform

the struggles of the present".[5]


Divided We Speak was exhibited at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago in 1997. In this exhibit,

audience members could carry wands that would trigger changes in image and sound content as they moved

through the MCA's video gallery. It accompanied a performance work, Divided We Stand, described as an

interactive media symphony in six movements, which linked the use of these wands to an event involving

musicians and dancers.[6]


Divided We Sing (1999) was commissioned by the Pittsburgh Center for the Arts and also used wand

technology, with the participants' gestures triggering spoken words (from radio and voice over artist Ken

Nordine) and sung music (from Urszula Dudziak and Jennifer Guo). Elaine King described it as follows, "The

visitor becomes a performer, sharing a stage with wall illusory shadow dancers. Every time a visitor appears in

Rogala's 'wand' theatre a fresh interactive performance emerges."[7]


Divided We See, like Divided We Sing, was an offshoot of a larger Divided We Stand project. About

it Rogala has written, "Divided We See is an artist's statement -- a virtual, artistic enactment of the

contingent relationship between freedom and limitation --emphasizing the ways of uniting people through new,

interactive technologies in physical and virtual space. . . . Can or should a moral or social metaphor be

constructed on the fact that far more energy is released by coming together (nuclear fusion) than coming apart

(nuclear fission)?" [8]

Video Installation and Live Performance

One of the strongest influences on Miroslaw Rogala's video creation was his work with the New York-based German video artist Dieter Froese, who had developed techniques for synchronizing multiple video channels to allow for simultaneous projections. [9]These skills led to the creation of a number of video installation and theater pieces which could be shown with precise frame-to-frame coordination between or among the different channels.

Questions to Another Nation (1985) was a four-channel video piece in which the viewer was invited to watch four television monitors simultaneously. The work presented a kind of debate or interaction among the four video sources. Writing in the Chicago Reader, critic Chris Strayer described how "Rogala embraces modern technology without losing touch with meaning. He integrates Polish, English, and computer languages with real, laser, and computer images. Faces spread across monitors until they look two directions simultaneously."[10]

Remote Faces: Outerpretation (1986) used seven synchronized channels of video, parallel to the seven days of the week, with two groups of three monitors flanking each side of a larger screen. With one side representing “pro” and the other “con,” Rogala’s playing with a dialogic structure continued and became even more complex when combined with elements of performance. The result was a 36-minute work of video theater. Colin Westerbeck of Artforum praised the way in which Rogala explored the ways in which video could be considered comparable to a language: "He probes the electronic image to see if it has, as they say in linguistics, inherent deep structures."[11]

Macbeth: The Witches Scenes was part of a production of Macbeth directed by Byrne Piven and performed in November and December 1988 at the Noyes Cultural Arts Center in Evanston, Illinois. Writing in the Chicago Sun-Times, Lynn Voedisch has described it by saying, "It features swirling photography, witches who resemble street people, robots and synthetic speech. Watching it was like taking a wrong step into a malevolent future."[12]

Nature Is Leaving Us was a "video opera" conceived and directed by Rogala and performed at the Goodman Theater in Chicago in October 1989. It involved three panoramic 6-foot by 8-foot video walls, with a total of 48 synchronized monitors, presented in conjunction with performances by actors, musicians, and dancers. It featured the singer Urszula Dudziak. Richard Christiansen of the Chicago Tribune wrote of it, "On this giant video canvas, Miroslaw Rogala has composed urban and rural images that rise up, fade out, dissolve, fragment, reduce, blow up, and spin like a top in an ever-changing miracle of computerized artistry."[13]

In EdgeMode (1997), the artist collaborated with choreographer Shirley Mordine. Each dancer chose a newspaper text that Rogala then processed and projected, using two synchronized channels, onto the dancer's naked body dudring the performance.[14]

In February 2001 in Philadelphia, Michael Iber performed piano compositions by Miroslaw Rogala whereby the sounds from the piano would trigger responses from a computer that would in turn produce sounds of its own and display video images.[15]

External links

Refereces

  1. Popper, Frank (2007). From Technological to Virtual Art. Boston: MIT Press. p. 173.
  2. Druckrey, Timothy (1995). ""Lovers Leap"". Artintact (2).
  3. Hansen, Mark B. N. (2004). New Philosophy for New Media. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press. p. 110.
  4. Ameluxen, Hubertus v., Stefan Iglhaut, Florian Rotzer, in collaboration with Alexis Cassel and Nikolaus G. Schneider, eds. (1996), Photography after Photography: Memory and Representation in the Digital Age. Munich: G + B Arts, 1996, 252.
  5. Miroslaw Rogala: Gestures of Freedom. Warsaw: Center for Contemporary Art. 2001. p. 100.
  6. "MCA presents interactive art installation by Miroslaw Rogala." Press release from the Chicago Museum of Contemporary Art, 25 August 1997.
  7. King, Elaine (1999). ""Divided We Sing"". Sculpture.
  8. Rogala, Miroslaw. "Divided We See: Audience (V)user Interactive Media Installation," Project description and artist statement (Unpublished).
  9. Prescott, David (14 March 1986). "Artist synthesizes 20th Century's high-tech onslaught.". Chicago Tribune. Sec. 7: 65.
  10. Strayer, Chris (3 February 1984). ""Screen Arts: Miroslaw Rogala's erupting images". Chicago Reader. 13 (9).
  11. Westerbeck, Colin (December 1986). ""A New Generation from SAIC, Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago". Artforum: 120.
  12. Voesdisch, Lynn (8 October 1989). "With 'Nature' artist creates a new electronic landscape". Chicag Sun-Times.
  13. Christiansen, Richard (19 October 1989). ""Video Opera Stars 48 TV Sets". Chicago Tribune. Section V: 7.
  14. Rogala, Miroslaw (2000). Strategies for Interactive Public Art: Dynamic Mapping with (V)user Behaviour and Multi-Linked Experience. Unpublished doctoral dissertation. Newport: University of Wales College. p. 143.
  15. "Miroslaw Rogala, Interactive Piano and Media Compositions". Poster for the event at Drexel University Auditorium, February 9, 2001.
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