Lecture “The Terpsitone: Dancing in Tune” | “Sound Revolution” lecture series

By admin, 22 September, 2023
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The Terpsitone: Dancing in Tune
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Experimental Sound Laboratory at MOMus – Museum of Modern Art – Costakis Collection  

Led by Andrey Smirnov 

September – October 2023: “Sound Revolution” lecture series  

  

Electronic sound, its history, its dimensions and connection with the present constitute the triptych of these seminar constituted of 4 lectures entitled “Experimental Sound Laboratory at MOMus – Museum of Modern Art – Costakis Collection Led by Andrey Smirnov” 

  

The most prolific and adventurous period in the history of sound experimentation and musical technology in Russian Avant-Garde, but also in the broader European Historical Avant-Gardes, is without a doubt that which ranges from 1910 to the end of the 1930s, when musicians turned to studying Physics and the development of pioneering ideas. Mathematicians started studying music theory and the artists that had understood the major principles of acoustics worked on new methods for the synthesis and transformation of sound.  

  

The Experimental Sound Laboratory at MOMus – Museum of Modern Art – Costakis Collection is based on the historical documents and original electronic musical instruments from the personal collection of Andrey Smirnov relating to that period, and aims at studying the Avant-Garde sound culture and to revive as well as advance the accomplishments of related technologies that proved to be many decades ahead of their time. The value and meaning of these ideas highly exceed the sphere of Russian Avant-Garde. Today, we usually utilize them not being aware of their origins, while multiple ideas evolve in a new, creative manner.  

  

The Experimental Sound Laboratory will develop educational programs in the form of lectures and workshops, targeted to musicians and music historians as well as to the general public, with a distinct interest in Russian Avant-Garde, sound and new media art, electronic and electroacoustic music.  

  

Curriculum Vitae 

Andrey Smirnov is a musical artist and researcher, known worldwide for his innovative teaching method and his research in the fields of electronic music and the history of Avant-Garde music alongside visual arts. He is the founder of the Theremin Centre and has been the Head of Sound Laboratory at the Rodchenko Art – School in Moscow. He teaches courses on the history and aesthetics of electro-acoustic music, sound design and composition, new musical interfaces and physical computing.  

Andrey has conducted many workshops and seminars, targeted both at professionals and the general public, in the USA, Europe and Russia and he has participated at significant festivals and conferences.  

Andrey Smirnov is the author of the books «Sound In Z: Experiments in Sound and Electronic Music in Early 20th Century Russia» (Walther Koenig & Sound and Music, London, 2013) and «In Search of Lost Sound. Experimental Sound Culture in Russia and USSR in the first half of the 20th century» (Moscow, GARAGE, 2020) (The Book of the Year Award, Innovation 2021). 

From September 2023, Andrey works as a special scientific associate at Momus Museum of Modern Art, Costakis Collection in Thessaloniki.  

   

Detailed Lectures’ Program 

All lectures will be held in English without interpretation.  

    

Experimental Sound Laboratory 

Seminar; Lecture Series 2023: “Sound Revolution” 

September – October 2023  

  

“The Terpsitone: Dancing in Tune” 

Thursday 12 October 2023 | 18:00-20:00 

MOMus Museum of Modern Art, Costakis Collection  

21st Kolokotroni Street, Moni Lazariston, 56430, Stavroupoli  

  

The story of the Terpsitone - the world’s first motion-tracking system built by Leon Theremin in the US in 1931. It was a variation on the famous Theremin, a musical instrument, which one could play without even touching it. But instead of an antenna for the hand it uses an antenna-platform for the whole body. Dancers’ movements are converted into corresponding tones — moving an arm or a leg is sufficient to produce a noticeable change of tone. According to the press of the time: ‘By means of Prof. Theremin’s latest device, a dancer may create music by the movements of her body. A capacity device in the floor is mainly responsible… The inventive genius of Professor Leon Theremin has at last justified a famous poet in his license. Many years ago, Tennyson wrote: “The dancers dancing in tune”. Though it was never mass produced, the Terpsitone has been successfully used in the 1930-s in the US by a group of dancers, collaborating with Leon Theremin. Later two Terpsitones were built in Russia in the 1960-70-s. Andrey Smirnov’s reconstructions of the instrument will be presented to the audience and available for dancing. 

  

Participation Information: 

  • Registrations at info.modern@momus.gr or at +30 2310 589143, up until Thursday the 28th of September 2023 at 14:00. An order of precedence will be followed.  
  • An attendance certificate will be given to participants 
  • Participation fee:  
  • €80 / person,  
  • €60 / person for students, upon presentation of a student ID 
  • Depending on availability, the cost of participation at a 2-hour lecture is €30/person and €20 for students, upon presentation of a student ID