Photo by Seanica Howe.
More than 50 years later, the men and women who control the fine art market continue to push against the hierarchy that divides artists and their audiences. This week, I found myself being sucked into this very concept. I had been invited to an event, passed on to me by a local curator, to see "an interesting Iphone app/art piece." Huh? Since when do curators see Iphone apps as art? Obviously, I needed to investigate.
Between sets, Nicolas Lobo and Dylan Romer, the creators of the application, used the Purple-Goo app to entertain the audience by manipulating the live music of the band---with their permission, of course. Goo breaks down a song into its most basic structure, an act that Lobo and Romer both quantify as an art form, and they should know: Romer studied art before his interests shifted to computer programming, and Lobo is a sculptor whose work is shown by Gallery Diet here in Miami.
Photo by Seanica Howe.
Think about it---then go get you some Goo.
This article was originally written for publication with The Miami New Times Blog, Cultist. This writing, as well as others by the author, can be accessed here:
http://blogs.miaminewtimes.com/cultist/2013/08/purple_goo.php#more