T. Kelly Mason and
Diana Thater The future
that almost wasn't
a live performance for audio and video
8, 9 April 1999
The future that almost
wasn't was a live performance for audio and video produced collaboratively
by T. Kelly Mason and Diana Thater. The work combined contemporary
electronic music,
composed and performed by T. Kelly Mason with guest DJs Chris Wilder
and David Hollander, along with a video projection environment,
edited and created live by Diana Thater with guest VJs Jessica Bronson
and Jessica Lane. A 2500 square foot room was lined with white vinyl
screens that soften the architecture and and serve as a scrim for
the projection of images. Within the room was a station from which
the VJs and DJs perform.
This performance addressed
the way viewers process information. Viewers may become one
with the environment through complete consciousness of, and participation
in the complex
of things happening in the art space. The future that almost wasn't
addresses the relationship
between art and technology in 20th century art and examines the
moment of their
merging in the 1960s avant-garde performance scene. Billy Klver
once identified "the artist [as] a positive force in perceiving
how technology can be translated to new environments to serve needs
and provide variety and enrichment of life." The future that almost
wasn't addresses a history of 20th century artistic efforts to explore
and create relationships between music and visual art. For example,
the electronic music of this performance reflects both the current
use of tropes in techno and house music as well as their historical
precedents in the complex audio environments designed by composers
such as David Tudor and Gordon Mumma. The mutual dependence of the
past and the present are drawn out as well in the multiple simultaneous
video projections. The VJs cull their material equally from film,
television, and art, mixing images from the entire history of moving
pictures freely with the tapes they have shot themselves and with
live images being shot in the space.