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Wikipedia Archive 2024
Jo Ann (Jody) Gillerman
https://www.joanngillerman.com
https://art-pod.org
https://vipervertex.com
Gillerman, AnArchy pARTyCAM - real-time Improv cyber performances 1993-1995
An accurate and complete Biographical Piece - JoAnn Gillerman by Celeste Connor (Art Historian) -
was written for "Women of Vision" Journal and Works Broadcasts on PBS/KCSM hosted by Jan Yanehiro
is a good overview of JoAnn Gillerman and her art works in the 1970's, 1980's, 1990's
Excerpts are Referenced Below with links to complete article

Gillerman using Light Wand (neon) to control and move graphic elements on the video display screen (for "Kundalini & Baseball" live performance, 1990)

Orchid Series Computer Graphics - Gillerman © 1985
Published: CRASH book
Whispers in a Plane of Light - Gillerman in Live Performance with her Sandin Video Image Processor, Digicon 83, Vancouver, B.C.
Biographies and writings about JoAnn (Jody) Gillerman
Overview of the 1970's
Biographies about JoAnn (Jody) GIllerman - the 1970's
1970's
OVERVIEW: What to cover: Gillerman's summary of the 1970's

Even before graduating from Duke University/Durham/NC, (BA/1972) in Medical and Botanical Illustrating, my botanical illustrations had been published in the Missouri Botanical Gardens Journals, St Louis, MO - establishing my very early interests and connections of art and science. I Received my MFA/1975 from the Chicago Art Institute in Painting (Drawing/Printmaking/Sculpture) and VIDEO ART (a then new medium – (Videography Magazine).  In Chicago, under mentorship of Phil Morton and Dan Sandin, I was introduced to Live Video Art, Multi-Channel Video Installation, Video Synthesis and Computer Graphics. I was also introduced to video artists Woody and Steina Vasulka, Bill and Louise Etra (now Louise Ledeen). During this time in Chicago, I also met Gene Youngblood, Vibeke Sorenson, Philip Glass, Nam June Paik, Chris Burden, Maryanne Amacher, and others. Interested in Audience Interaction, I started creating Interactive (sensor-controlled) multi-channel video Installations (installed in public: One Illinois Center, Chicago Museum of Art, and others) and video processing, synthesis and computer graphics – live and recorded on videotape.  In 1975 (Chicago), I started building from scratch, self-taught electronics - a patch-programmable analog Sandin Video Image Processor/Synthesizer (from schematics designed by Dan Sandin), that I completed after relocating to the Bay Area, California, to provide live Image Processing video/visuals in a series of electronic music performances (in/around the Bay Area/SF) with the Real* Electric Symphony, establishing integral abstracted live connections of video and music.  Very early interest and works integrating Live Real-Time Video (analog) with Computer Graphics (digital) – creating non-narrative, abstract, non-linear works manipulating the video signal. A frequent collaborator, James Gillerman, my brother, composed original music for my video works. I started teaching at California College of the Arts, Oakland, CA. in 1976 - and simultaneously created large-scale projections of Live Video Processing for public events, including Margo St. James' Hookers Balls (1977-1978). Fafnir, my 10' long Boa Constrictor, appeared in many of my works of this time - live installations and video. I formed "Viper Optics" for collaborative works and large-scale live processing events. I was fortunate to be invited to live/work in Peter Voulkos' artists' compound –a lively community of working artists (including Marylin Levine, Tom Holland, Bella Feldman, Clay Jensen and others), that is now the Dome Center for Art, Music and Dance.

* Note: When I started creating video art, video synthesis, video installation, computer graphics and live performance in the early-mid '70s - these media art forms were new, not well defined, and not the acceptable art world mediums of today. Video Artists needed to be creative, finding alternative spaces, venues, and places to get their works shown. Broadcast TV was a challenge (technically, politically and otherwise restricted), but also a way to reach a large audience. My preference was more decentralized venues. Few galleries had the means or media arts equipment to accommodate/show electronic works at that time. So low/high-tech electronic works were often exhibited, screened and performed at well-attended large related conferences, specialized symposia, public events, and occasionally museums who had the means to provide necessary equipment, and a hand full of specialized video art galleries (i.e. Video Free America/SF/CA, The Kitchen/NY).  Broadcast/PBS, Cablecasts were possible within boundaries through specialized art programs. 

Referenced:

* Videography/NY - "San Francisco: Life among the Independents"  (below)

* Real Electric Symphony: composers/musicians/performers: Ron Pellegrino, James Gillerman, Frankie Mann and others

Biographies and Writings ABOUT JoAnn (Jody) Gillerman
Overview of the '70's
Complete Biographies, Reviews and Writings about JoAnn (Jody) GIllerman - the 70's -
are available in "Reference Materials -70's" (below ) - click picture or article name to link to page with more information and complete article
  • Bullet Points (below writing) signify important Key Points, Important references in article

JoAnn Gillerman by Celeste Connor

Women of Vision Journal, Summer 1997 Season

Complete Article: JoAnn Gillerman by Celeste Connor

(excerpts below)

JoAnn Gillerman is a Berkeley-based electronic media artist and educator who has taught at the California College of Arts and Crafts since 1976. Her artwork is impressively broad in range, including video production, interactive installation, interactive CD Rom, internet on-line design and performance art. Like most artist of her generation, Gillerman's early art training was in the fine arts, principally painting and printmaking.  Yet, by the time she received her MFA from the Art Institute of Chicago in 1975, she had already begun to experiment in the new media of video and performance. Although they were created before artists had access to personal sized computers and appropriate software, the early works were interactive in nature. Gillerman has always been and remains interested in stimulating audience participation.

Gillerman started building a Sandin Image Processor [video synthesizer] in 1976 before migrating to California. The Sandin, which she used to manipulate video signals in many subsequent live performances, was completed in 1977. Music and sound have always been important components in her art.  Gillerman's first series of performances, dating between 1976-78, were accompanied by audio created by the Real* Electronic Symphony. In 1978 Gillerman was selected to broadcast excerpts of her work on KRON-TV the San Francisco NBC affiliate. In that same year, Video Free America featured her multi-channel installation "Predominantly Fafnir", in a one woman show.  ...

Viewed broadly, Gillerman's art of the 1970's was primarily concerned with an exploration of the relationship of visual imagery and music. 

• Complete Article: JoAnn Gillerman by Celeste Connor Women of Vision Journal, Summer 1997 Season, Hosted by TV journalist Jan Yanehiro,  (Women of Vision," a six-week series showcasing films and videos by the Bay Area's best female filmmakers.  includes documentaries, features, animated short films and videos, with discussions with their creators. Works Broadcast and PBS)

OVERVIEW of the '70's - Important points in Biographical Piece by Celeste Connor (above)
  • BUILDS SANDIN VIDEO IMAGE PROCESSOR/SYNTHESIZER | EARLY VIDEO SYNTHESIS: "Gillerman started building a Sandin Image Processor [video synthesizer/self-taught electronics] in 1976 before migrating to California. The Sandin, which she used to manipulate video signals in many subsequent live performances, was completed in 1977."
  • EXPERIMENTING WITH NEW MEDIA AND PERFORMANCE  "... by the time she received her MFA from the Art Institute of Chicago in 1975, she had already begun to experiment in the new media of video and performance. "
  • EARLY INTERACTIVE COMPUTER ARTS:  "Although they were created before artists had access to personal sized computers and appropriate software, the early works were interactive in nature. Gillerman has always been and remains interested in stimulating audience participation."

  • REAL* ELECTRIC SYMPHONY AND EARLY PERFORMANCES EXPERIMENTING WITH LIVE  VISUALS AND MUSIC/SOUND RELATIONSHIPS: "Relationships of Visuals, Music and Sound are important components in her art.  Gillerman's first series of performances, dating between 1976-78, were accompanied by audio created by the Real* Electronic Symphony."

  • EARLY BROADCASTS OF VIDEO ART: "In 1978 broadcasts her works on KRON-TV the San Francisco NBC affiliate."

  • MULTIMEDIA MULTI-CHANNEL INSTALLATION AND ONE WOMAN SHOW, VIDEO FREE AMERICA/S.F./CA: "1978 - Video Free America featured her multi-channel installation "Predominantly Fafnir" in a one woman show.

Video Free America Presents

Book by Joanne Kelly

(complete entry below)

excerpts

 

  • "Fafnir, her [very large] pet Boa Constrictor, was often featured in Live Performance and Video of that period"

            Reference: Video Free America Presents" book by Joanne Kelly (below)

  • "Created [large-scale] LIVE Video Environments and Live Video Synthesis at Hooker's Balls 1977-1978"

        (Hooker's Balls: 1977/Civic Center/SF, 1978/Cow Palace/SF)

           Reference: Video Free America Presents" book by Joanne Kelly (below)

SIGNIFICANT ART WORKS    (1970's)
Video, Muli-Channel, Multi-media Installation, Video Synthesis, Live Video/Music Performance
(referred to in Reference Material)

Homage to the Exploration of Venus © 1978 Video/Performance (Video: JoAnn Gillerman, Music: James Gillerman)

       •  First West Coast Computer Faire, San Francisco Civic Center (for Audio following link below)

       •  "Independent Video in San Francisco: A Grand Tour" by Mia Amato, Videography, Volume 5, Number 2 - February 1980

 

Excerpts © 1979  Video
      •  "Independent Video in San Francisco: A Grand Tour" by Mia Amato, Videography, Volume 5, Number 2 - February 1980 (and Videography, May 1980)

      •   Collection: Long Beach Museum of Art, LA/CA)

Live (real-time) Improvisational Performances with the Real* Electric Symphony, 1976

     Live Video Synthesis/Music Performances: Cats Paw Palace/Berkeley/CA, SF/CA; Mabuhay Gardens/SF, Blue Dolphin/SF and others

      •  Referenced: "JoAnn Gillerman "by Celeste Connor, Women of Vision (above)

Live Video Synthesis - Projected on Large Display Screens, The Hooker's Balls (1977/Civic Center/SF/CA, 1978/Cow Palace/SF/CA) 

         [Also Trocadero Transfer, The Glass House, and many others in SF]

      •  Referenced: Video Free America Presents" by Joanne Kelly (book)


Snake Tapes (includes *Predominantly Fafnir - Live Performance/Installation/Video) © 1976-1979

     •  Video Free America/SF/CA, One Woman Show, Performance/Muli-Channel, Multimedia Installation/performance with Fafnir, Gillerman's Boa Constrictor

     •  Referenced:  "Video Free America Presents" by Joanne Kelly (book)

     •  Referenced: "JoAnn Gillerman" by Celeste Connor , Women of Vision (above)

Reference Materials Below (70's)
Complete Biographies, Reviews and Writings about JoAnn (Jody) GIllerman - the 70's -
are available in "Reference Materials -70's" (below ) - click picture or articl
e name to link to page with more information and complete article

BOOK:

References to important aspects of Gillerman's work in the '70's in Video Free America Presents,book by Joanne Kelly:

  • Pet Boa Constrictor, Fafnir, frequent subject of video and live performances of the '70's - and inspired name Viper Optics.

  • Works performed & installations/environments at Cats Paw Palace, Lawrence Hall of Science, SF Hooker's Balls  (SF Civic Cetner and Cow Palace)

  • Video Synthesis and Computer Graphics - technical skills developed during MFA and at Chicago Art Insititue and U. of IL [where Dan Sandin taught}

  • Large-scale Interactive works to draw in Audience Interaction

  • Teaching at California College of Arts and Crafts

  • Equipment of her studio (Viper Optics)

Videography, Volume 5, Number 2, February 1980, Publisher: United Business Publications, Inc., a subsidiary of Media Horizons, New York, NY

"San Francisco: Life among the Independents"

I do not believe broadcast to be a 'natural' medium for video art. I do not support broadcast as a political institution. I was quite vocal at the meeting in suggesting that I personally was more interested in videodisc than broadcast.    Jo Ann Gillerman       (Videography, May 1980)

WEIRD OTHER 1970's

THE FIRST WEST COAST COMPUTER FAIRE, San Francisco, CA. (archived) - 1977

Archived: AUDIO PRESENTATION (30 min) of JoAnn Gillerman

Presents Art Works at the First West Coast Computer Faire, San Francisco, CA

Presenter/Panelist: "Video Synthesis & Performance with an Analog Computer" by JoAnn Gillerman

Archived Reference: https://archive.org/details/camvchm_000019  (INTERNET ARCHIVE: complete archived audio - Gillerman introduced end section 3/continues entire section 4)

Video Synthesis Works:

          "Homage to the Exploration of Venus"

          "Yorica"

AUDIO IS IN COLLECTIONS:

The West Coast Computer Faire was an annual computer industry conference and exposition. The first fair was held in 1977 and was organized by Jim Warren and Bob Relling. At the time, it was the biggest computer show in the world, intended to popularize the personal computer in the home. This first fair took place on April 16-17, 1977, in San Francisco Civic Auditorium and Brooks Hall ... [other presenters: " ... Apple II, presented by then 21-year-old Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak, ... Tom DeFanti, Dan Sandin and Larry Leske, "Roaming around in Abstract 3-D spaces", Jo Ann Gillerman, "Video Synthesis & Performance with an Analog Computer" Stephen Beck, "Video Synthesis: Expanding Electronic Vision" Larry Forman chair a panel titled "Computer-driven video systems"]

https://archive.org/details/camvchm_000019  (complete archived text and audio)

Computer History Museum, 1401 N Shoreline Blvd., Mountain View, CA 94043
First West Coast Computer Faire Proceedings
in collection of Computer History Museum

https://www.computerhistory.org/collections/catalog/102725950
 
1980's
OVERVIEW: What to cover: Gillerman's summary of the '80's

Explorations of New Media and the direct integral relationships of image and sound dominated the 80's along with themes of sensuality and eroticism. A seminal piece (for me) was Whispers in a Plane of Light, a Live/Real-Time Performance (and video) that premiered live at Digicon 83, Vancouver, B.C. and Cadre 84. This piece brought together many important aspects of my work.  Rejecting the notion that (abstract) computer graphics at that time were only eye-candy, I was determined to bring humanistic sensuality and abstractly erotic elements in technologically sophisticated Live Performance, Video Synthesis and Computer Graphics works. (Orchid, Orchid Live Performance,) A strong painterly visual aesthetic (grounded in my solid background of the Fine Arts, Painting/Drawing/Sculpture/Printmaking) brought this sensibility and attention to create electronically generated complex imagery mixing multiple elements seamlessly in Real-Time environments and recorded analog video works. (I used my (analog) Image Process/IP as an elaborate real-time switcher to sophisticatedly mix multiple digital/computer graphics and several live video camera sources into morphing layered montage.)  I also started Incorporating political and social issues of the times into my works (Clone Baby, Five Responses to the Political Condition 1980, Electric Dream). I frequently worked in collaboration during the '80's – often with musicians. I was invited to - Simon Fraser U/Emily Carr College of Art, Vancouver/BC and Metro Television/Sydney/Australia - to create hybrid Image processing works and perform live video/synthesis (with my IP) in combination with varied exotic high-end computer graphics Systems. "In 1980, David Ross curated a one woman show of her works at the Pacific Film Archive, University Art Museum in Berkeley. "During this period her pioneering work" was also broadcast in Canada and Australia.​" and published/distributed in US and Japan. (Referenced quote from Celeste Connor's Bio piece below - and other references below). I started showing frequently in * * SIGGRAPH Art Shows (video synthesis/computer graphics/interactive installation/performance) and the Electronic Theater Film Shows (Video and a Live Video/Music Performance "Orchid: Live Performance, Dallas Convention Center, 1986). I created multi-channel slide installations and performances with large projections of processed/synthesized images and computer graphics.

I received a National Endowment for the Arts Visual Arts Fellowship in 1980.

* Siggraph/ACM is a premier International Computer Graphics Conference for Technology and Art. Based in US and Japan, it is comprised of an Art Show for Computer Arts, Computer Graphics, Installations and Environments, The Electronic Theater of Computer Graphics Films and Live Performance, Exhibitions of Emerging Computer and Graphics systems, Related Workshops and Presentations, Exhibition Hall. It is well funded and often provides high-tech multimedia equipment and displays to artists for installations/environments. The Siggraph VIdeo Reviews and Archives Publishes and Internationally Distributes invited computer graphics/computer art works on video.

SIGNIFICANT ART WORKS     (1980's)
Live/Real-Time Video-Music Performance, Video Art, Computer Graphics/Video, Live/Real-Time Computer Graphics Performance/Video,

VideoMusic, Muli-Channel/MultiMedia Installation


(Reference Materials below)

Whispers in a Plane of Light  - Live Performance/Video 1983-1984  Live/Video/Computer Graphics: JoAnn Gillerman, Live/Music: Jean Piché

         Performed LIVE in Real-time:

             - Digicon83, 1983/Vancouver/BC/Canada  (Credits: Video, IP and Computer Graphics/JoAnn Gillerman, Music/Jean Piché, Camera/Jim Whiteaker)

             - CADRE84, 1984/Santa Clara/CA, Oakland/CA (Credits: Video and Computer Graphics/JoAnn Gillerman, Music/Jean Piché, Camera/Jim Whiteaker, Model/Gretchen Bright)

      References: (details/articles below)

             •  "Digicon 83: Context for Computer Art" by Jerry Barenholtz, Interdisciplinary Studies, Simon Fraser University, Vancouver, BC

            •  "Digicon 83. by Paul D. Lehrman", Creative Computing, Vol. 10, No. 4 / April 1984 / P. 172, "Gillerman Takes it Off" (Excerpt and complete article below)

             •   "JoAnn GIllerman by Celeste Connor" , Women of Vision (above)

            •  Oakland Museum of the Arts, Oakland Museum of California, May/June 1990, Volume 13, number 6 - Video Visions, Electronic Dreams by Liz Kotz

            •  SIGGRAPH Electroinc Theater 84, Minneapolis, Minnesota, 1984

                ( "A live video/music collaboration, this performance has been performed at DIGICON ’83 in Vancouver, British Columbia;

                 CADRE ’84 in Santa Clara, California; and, in Oakland, California in 1984. “It is an exciting, very sensual performance”... Creative Computing, April 1984 issue")

                 Hardware: Sandin image processor for analog switching and  mixing, Fairlight sound synthesizer, Aurora Videographics System for digital computer graphics

                 Technical notes: This is the tape resulting from a live, collaborative video/music performance. The Fairlight provided several control voltages that were directly patched

                 to the several video input images being mixed/ keyed on the analog video processor.") https://history.siggraph.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/SIGGRAPH-1984-Electronic-Theater.pdf -p13

          •   Video Distribution: SIGGRAPH/ACM VIDEO REVIEW

Orchid - Computer Graphics Video © 1985 - Broadcast/PBS, Siggraph/

     References:  (details/articles below)

            •  Oakland Museum of the Arts, Oakland Museum of California, May/June 1990, Volume 13, number 6 - Video Visions, Electronic Dreams by Liz Kotz

           •  Computer Graphics, Feature Magazine Article & Cover, About the Cover: "Dancing Orchids and Other Art" by Margaret Neal, 

                IEEE Computer Graphics, Year: 1986, Volume: 6, Issue: 12, Pages: 4-7

            •  The S.F. Bay Guardian: After Dark, Sept 18, 1985, Vol 19, No 48 - Full Page COVER: caption: "Jo Ann Gillerman's 'Orchid' is among the video-art tapes being presented                        by the Mill Valley VIdeofest"

           •  Artweek 1985, Oct, Vol 16, Number 34, The Mill Valley Festival by Christine Tamblyn, REVIEW: " ... Fortunately, JoAnn GIllerman's Orchid, which shows baroquely

               elegant digitized images of orchids dissolving and reforming indicated that computer graphics systems can be used to produce viable alternatives to "video wallpaper"

            •  WIFV -Made for TV Festival, New England Women In Fiim and Video 1985, Juried/Curated ... screenings of popular and esoteric works ... celebrating the contributions of 

               women to broadcast and non-broadcast television.


Orchid: Live Performance, 1986 - Vdeo: JoAnn Gillerman, Music: Bill Buton - Siggraph Electronic Theater/Dallas Convention Center

        References:  (details/articles below)

            •     IEEE/ Computer Graphics: About the Cover: Dancing Orchids and Other Art" by Margaret Neal

                 "The show is really a new art form. The stage is set with three screens: one center stage measures 15' x 20' and two on the sides of the stage measuring 20' x 20' each.

                  Slides dissolve on the two side screens while a live performer takes center stage under the center screen.  This is all done to live music, and Gillerman coordinates the 

                  entire thing in real-time."

           •     VID Magazine: "First video revolution. Now the video revelation." Vol. 2, Number 1, 1987, "The Amiga, The Videophile's Dream" by David Beasly

           •     Robo City News, 1987, Amiga Does SIGGRAPH '86 by Wendy Peterson: 

                 "In the midst of an annual event designed to pay homage to computer graphics generated on big, sophisticated, expensive (try $30K and up) mainframes, there was

                  video artist JoAnn Gillerman with her Amiga, Genloc, LIVE! Frame-Grabber, Deluxe Video, camera, dancer, neon lighting, three 20 foot projection screens."


Electric Dream © Viper Optics © 1984  Video and Music by Viper Optics: JoAnn Gillerman, Jim Whiteaker, James Gilerman

      References:  (details/articles below)

         •  Theatrical Release |  U.C. Theater, Berkeley, CA, 1986

           •  AWARD: Best Experimental Video, Hollywood Erotic Film and Video Festival/Los Angeles/CA, 1986

           •  Paramount (home video), Published/Distribution: Best of the Hollywood Erotic Film and Video Festival, VHS/DVD 1986

          • Oakland Museum of the Arts, Oakland Museum of California, May/June 1990, Volume 13, number 6 - Video Visions, Electronic Dreams by Liz Kotz


Clone Baby © 1984 - Video and Music by Viper Optics: JoAnn Gillerman, Jim Whiteaker, James Gillerman (MusicVideo - 4 min.)

      References:  (details/articles below)

      •  Creature Features/KTVU Channel 2, with John Stanley, Live (TV) Interview with JoAnn Gillerman and James Gillerman; Siggraph/U.S./Japan, Broadcast/PBS, Distribution)

       •  The Enterprise, Oakland, 1st Year, No. 87, Sunday, May 29, 1983, Art of the future by David Weinstein (Staff Writer)

       •  Distribution and Archive: Siggraph Video Reviews, US and Japan Archive

Fiber Form © 1982 (Fiber Form II combines Fiber Form and Moiré)

     References:  (details/articles below)

       •  AWARD: Best Experimental Video, Taboo, 1985, Hollywood Erotic Film and Video Festival/Los Angeles/CA,

        • The Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, Video-Music: New Correlations (screenings/traveling) 1982

        • San Francisco Museum of Modern Art/SFMOMA, San Francisco, CA

Moiré © 1985 (Fiber Form II combines Fiber Form and Moiré)

     References:  (details/articles below)

        •  Women's Video Art Showcase, review by Julie Nolan- Aug/Sept 1985 Northern California Women in Film & Video

        •  San Francisco Museum of Modern Art/SFMOMA, San Francisco, CA

Five Responses to the Political Condition Nov. 1980 © 1980 Video: JoAnn Gillerman, Music: James Gillerman  (14 min)

      References:  (details/articles below)
      • The Whitney Museum of American Art/NY/NY, Video-Music: New Correlations (screenings/traveling) 1982

        •  San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, SF, CA

        •  SIIGGRAPH Video Reviews: history/artwork/archived/distribution

             https://digitalartarchive.siggraph.org/artwork/jo-ann-gillerman-five-responses-to-the-political-condition-now/

             https://history.siggraph.org/artwork/jo-ann-gillerman-five-responses-to-the-political-condition-now/

        •  SIGGRAPH Video Reviews - distribution

Lady E © 1981 Video and Music by Viper Optics: JoAnn Gillerman, Jim Whiteaker, James Gillerman  (MusicVideo - 4 min)

      References:  (details/articles below)

      • The Whitney Museum of American Art/NY/NY, Video-Music: New Correlations (screenings/traveling) 1982

        •  San Fancisco Museum of Modern Art, SF/CA - Video-Music: New Correlations (traveling) 1982

What are you scared of?   © 1981 Viper Optics Video and Music by Viper Optics: JoAnn Gillerman, Jim Whiteaker, James Gillerman  (MusicVideo - 4 min)

      References:  (details/articles below)

      • The Whitney Museum of American Art/NY/NY, Video-Music: New Correlations (screenings/traveling) 1982

Viper Video © 1984 Video and Music by Viper Optics (JoAnn Gillerman, Jim Whiteaker, James Gillerman)

(A Collection of 8 VideoMusic pieces: Pentagon, Silver Field Song, Lady E, Clone Baby, Electric Dream, Tech Trilogy: Decentralization, Tech Central, Techtopia)

    References:  (details/articles below)

        •  Creature Features with John Stanley, "Gang of Tomorrow" - KTVU/Channel 2, Live Interview on TV with Jo Ann Gillerman and James Gillerman, VIper Optics

        •  Broadcast of Clone Baby/Viper Video on Creature Features, KTVU/Channel 2

Night Feeder © 1989 - Shot on Video Feature Length Film (Jo Ann Gillerman, Jim Whiteaker, James Gillerman)

        • Exclusive International Distribution, FATW/NY 1990-1993

        • All Markets Distribution, Mondo/Bleeding Skull/ TX 2015-2019

        • All Markets, SRS/NY 2020-current

        • IEEE/ Computer Graphics: About the Cover: Dancing Orchids and Other Art" by Margaret Neal

         "Gillerman's first project for the future is to take this multi-image, live show and computer graphic animated video show around the world. But there is more going on in her busy

          head. She is starting work on a feature-length horror movie" ...

Biographies and Writings ABOUT JoAnn (Jody) Gillerman
Overview of the 1980's
Complete Biographies, Reviews and Writings about JoAnn (Jody) GIllerman - the 80's -
are available in "Reference Materials -80's" (below ) - click picture/article name to link to page with more information and complete article
  • Bullet Points (below writing) signify important Key Points

 

JoAnn Gillerman by Celeste Connor

Women of Vision Journal, Summer 1997 Season

Complete Article: JoAnn Gillerman by Celeste Connor

(excerpts below)

In 1980, David Ross curated a one woman show of her [Gillerman's] work at the Pacific Film Archive at the University Art Museum in Berkeley. During this period her pioneering work was also broadcast in Canada and Australia.

Viewed broadly, Gillerman's art of the 1970's was primarily concerned with an exploration  of the relationship of visual imagery and music.  During this decade Gillerman, often in collaboration with others, explored the limits of sound controlling video and video controlling sound. It is important to consider that all this was undertaken without the aid of sophisticated MIDI system used today.  Further, these experiments were conducted in real time. It is the element of time that Gillerman considers the most unique and beautiful property of the medium. Works of the 70's were also concerned with expanding the sensory perceptions of the audience. As a body, they share a sensuousness suited to their predominately erotic themes.  The culmination of her experiments of this period is Whispers in a Plane of Light as work performed live with Jean Piché that was featured at both Digicon 1983 and CADRE 1984, two influential computer industry conferences.

Gillerman's signature themes of erotic and sensual elements are important threads that connect Gillerman's work over time. They are carried into the eighties when Gillerman's work attention was to experimentation on the Aurora Video Graphics system, her preferred "high-end" (i.e. very costly) paint system of that decade. At this time she created works like Orchid a highly erotic depiction of the flower that is composed of the body of a fully-frontal male nude in a seductive Georgia O'Keefe like palette. Gillerman commuted to San Francisco at 4am to create on the Aurora and traveled to Canada to use a Key Frame animation system until a small personal computer, the Amiga, became available to artists in 1986. Since 1979, Gillerman has exhibited frequently at the premiere computer graphics convention, Siggraph, where the relationship of art and technology has been explored with landmark success.

• Complete Article: JoAnn Gillerman by Celeste Connor Women of Vision Journal, Summer 1997 Season, Hosted by TV journalist Jan Yanehiro,  (Women of Vision," a six-week series showcasing films and videos by the Bay Area's best female filmmakers.  includes documentaries, features, animated short films and videos, with discussions with their creators. Works Broadcast and PBS)

OVERVIEW of the '80's - Important points in Biographical Piece by Celeste Connor (above)
  • WHISPERS IN A PLANE OF LIGHT LIVE VIDEO/MUSIC PERFORMANCE - IMPORTANT WORK: ... WAS THE culmination of experiments with direct integral relationships of sound directly controlling visuals and visuals directly controlling sound, all in rea-time (10 min) performance Live VideoMusic Performance with a theme of sensuality -Whispers in a Plane of Light was a work performed live  - JoAnn Gillerman/Video and Jean Piché/Music - was featured at Digicon 1983 and CADRE 1984, two influential computer art conference events.

  • COLLABORATION: Often worked  in collaboration with others, exploring the limits of sound controlling video and video controlling sound.

  • EXPERIMENTS CREATED VERSION OF MIDI-like SYSTEM PRE-MIDI: Performed on her [analog, patch-programable]  Sandin Image Processor in real-time - and without the aid of sophisticated MIDI systems used today.

  • GILLERMAN PERSONAL VIDEO/PERFORMANCE PHILOSOPHY:  "Real-time a unique and beautiful property of the video medium"

  • SENSUAL/EROTIC NATURE OF WORKS: Her works (in '70's and '80's) often share a sensuousness/erotic nature

  • ONE WOMAN SHOW AT PFA/BERKELEY MUSEUM: "In 1980, David Ross curated a one woman show of her work at the Pacific Film Archive at the University Art Museum in Berkeley.

  • PIONEERING WORK: "During this period her pioneering work was also broadcast in Canada and Australia.

[

Digicon 83. by Paul D. Lehrman

"Jody Gillerman Takes It Off​"

CREATIVE COMPUTING
VOL. 10, NO. 4 / APRIL 1984 / PAGE 172

Complete Article: https://www.atarimagazines.com/creative/v10n4/164_Digicon_83.php

Whispers in a Plane of Light Live Performance, Digicon 83, Vancouver, Canada

A Live Performance: Jo Ann Gillerman (video) and Jean Piché (music)

(Excerpts below)​

"California video artist Jody Gillerman is walking around dressed in black leather and a huge red LED bracelet, and Piche shoos away a flock of photographers.

​...

Gillerman sits down on a stool and takes off her jacket, revealing a black leotard, Piché starts playing string-like drones, punctuated by tiny explosions. A tape of computer graphics can be seen on a small video monitor and on a projection screen, and slowly the image on the larger screen starts to change. Cameraman Jim Whiteaker is tightly focusing on Gillerman's neck, and the image of her caressing her bare skin starts to mix with the taped graphics. The music builds, and Piché begins to coo and sigh into a microphone. The camera angle of Gillerman is so tight that unless you can see her in the corner, it is hard to determine exactly what she is doing. It is an exciting, very sensual performance, and the audience applauds enthusiastically when it is over." ...

"Digi-Success: Gillerman/Piché"

Digicon 83: Context for Computer Art by Jerry Barenholtz

Interdisciplinary Studies, Simon Fraser University, Vancouver, B.C.,Canada

Complete Article

(Excerpts below)​

"Whispers in a Plane of Light" Live Performance © 1983 Gillerman/Piché]

 

... {is a} ten-minute live performance by Jean Piché on a Fairlight Computer Music Instrument, and Jody Gillerman on a Sandin IP (Video Image Processor) ...

...

Gillerman was to be controlling other aspects of the video. Piché was to modify the sounds and Gillerman was to modify other [live in real time] controls in response to the synthesized images appearing on the monitor.  ...

...

Gillerman was visible to the audience, and it was evident that she was merely rubbing her shoulder with one hand and twiddling knobs on the IP with the other. Likewise, one could see that Piché was just chanting into a microphone and playing keyboards, rather than the "oohing" and "aahing" which appeared on the video monitor. ...

...

The piece was very much a study in sensuality and erotic fantasy. In order to understand what it did and how it worked, it must be understood that the shared control of images was real and fully utilized, rather than just a theoretical possibility buried somewhere in six quintillion wires. The pitch and loudness of Piché's chanting directly controlled the mix percentage between the camera pointed at him and the rest of the visual elements [with real-time manual overrides and controls by Gillerman]. Thus Piché had direct control over not only the content of the image of himself (position and facial expression), but also over the way it appeared in the overall image. GIllerman too had this type of context/content control: In addition to being herself always on camera, the entire image was being assembled in the IP, which she was running via its front panel controls. [* all live and in real time]

...

Because of this control, the performance per se was fully theatrical: The performers appeared in roles, rather than merely as themselves running their respective machines. The roles and the general shape of the script had been agreed upon by the performers long before the performance. The actual elaboration, with respect to the "drama", the music and video, were worked up in a long series of rehearsals leading up to the performance. (The interpretation of the meaning of the performance is due to the present author, and may come as a surprise to the performers.)

...

The overall piece was unquestionably erotic. ... In addition to the twin technical triumphs of getting so many machines working together and controlling such a complex feedback loop without collapse or runaway, Gillerman and Piché presented the audience with a fine, subtle, sensual fantasy, which danced smoothly and confidently around the space bounded in one dimension by the personal and mythical, and in another dimension by the male and female.

...

Without a doubt, the Gillerman/Piché collaboration was the best work at DIGICON 83, and one can only hope that future DIGICONs or other contexts will bring these two and their respective machines together again.

OVERVIEW of '80's - Important points in Biographical Pieces: "Digicon 83" by Paul D. Lehrman and Digi-Success by Jerry Barenholtz
  • WHISPERS IN A PLANE OF LIGHT  - LIVE VIDEO/MUSIC PERFORMANCE AT DIGICON 83, Vancouver, BC, Canada, 1983, is a ten-minute live performance by Jean Piché on a Fairlight Computer Music Instrument, and Jody Gillerman on a Sandin IP (Video Image Processor)

  • WHISPERS is HIGHLY TECHNOLOGICAL AND AT THE SAME TIME EROTIC/SENSUAL - "The overall piece was unquestionably erotic" (Barenholtz)

  • VERY DIRECT RELATIONSHIP OF SOUND CONTROLLING VIDEO AND VIDEO CONTROLLING SOUND created a sort of feedback loop in realtime (Barenholtz)

  • "California video artist Jody Gillerman (walking around in black leather and a huge red LED bracelet) ... " (Lehrman)

  • Gillerman created the (pre-recorded) Computer Graphics and performed the Live Video Processing, mixing all elements of the performance in real-time - that were projected on huge screens for the audience ... (Barenholtz)

  • Gillerman and Piche were visible on their respective machines/instruments the entire time ... (Barenholtz)

  • Gillerman and Piché did extensive rehearsing for the performance that was highly scripted, though totally LIVE (Barenholtz)

  • Gillerman was operating the Image Processor and also on camera for the first performances of WHISPERS  ... (Barenholtz)

Artweek 1985

(Oct, Vol 16, Number 34)

REVIEW by Christine Tamblyn: "Mill Valley Film Video Festival"

(excertps)

  • "Fortunately, JoAnn GIllerman's Orchid, which shows baroquely elegant digitized images of orchids dissolving and reforming indicated that computer graphics systems can be used to produce viable alternatives to "video wallpaper"."

 

IEEE Computer Graphics Magazine

(Year: 1986, Volume: 6, Issue: 12, Cover and Pages: 4-7)

"About the Cover: Dancing Orchids and Other Art" by Margaret Neal

(JoAnn Gillerman - Cover and Feature Article)

(excerpts)

  • FINE ARTS BACKGROUD AND CONTEXT FOR ELECTRONIC ART: "Gillerman started painting and sculpting, but she soon found her drawing and painting tools were inadequate for what she  visualized. In those media she couldn't have motion, and she couldn't make moving colors. So, about 10 years ago she took to the computer and started experimenting." ... "With the computer," says Gillerman, "I can do things that don't exist in the real world and manipulate them

        quickly and easily, going though many permutations."

  •  NEW ART FORM: "The show is really a new art form. The stage is set with three screens: one center stage measures 15' x 20' and two on the sides of the stage measuring 20' x 20' each. Slides dissolve on the two side screens while a live performer takes center stage under the center screen.  This is all done to live music, and Gillerman coordinates the entire thing in real-time."

  • "Legacy:  And, all these discoveries of things to do with theoretical computer graphics are liberally shared with students at the California College of Arts and Crafts, where Gillerman has taught for a number of years and is now head of the Film and Video Department."

  • "The future: Gillerman's first project for the future is to take this multi-image, live show and computer graphic animated video show around the world. But there is more going on in her busy head. She is starting work on a feature-length horror movie ..."

  • ELECTRIC DREAM PICKED UP BY PARAMOUNT: "This will come right on the heels of a four-minute music video, called Electric Dream, which has been picked up by Paramount for distribution through the home video market."

  • KNOWN FOR EXPERIMENTATION: "Obviously this is a name we will all see again and again as interest in computer graphic animation grows and as Gillerman continues to experiment with her multimedia videotape shows."

The Oakland Museum of California,
May/June 1990, Volume 13, number 6

 

Video Visions, Electronic Dreams

by Liz Kotz
JoAnn Gillerman: "Whispers in a Plane of Light", "Electric Dream" and "Orchid

excerpt

...Gillerman uses the technology of computer-generated and re-processed images combined with electronic and acoustic music to develop different ways of making abstract visual designs.   Technically innovative and graphically oriented, the three videotapes, display some of the diverse possibilities offered by new computer arts technologies for work in video. 

(Click Article above or Picture below for complete writing)

GILLERMAN IN AUSTRALIA - 1983

Jo Ann Gillerman Artist Residency, Metro Television, Sydney, Australia, 1983

(Brought my NTSC Analog Sandin Image Processor/Synthesizer with me to set up in a PAL MetroTV Studio)

Sydney Morning Herald

No. 45,368, 1983, Australia

"Video for the '80's: Jo Ann Gillerman in Sydney" by Margaret Werghein

  • Jo Ann Gillerman, a video artist and producer from California, is in Sydney ...

  • Gillerman, an assistant professor in video art at California College of Arts and Crafts, has been brought out by Metro Television for two weeks to give workshops in high tech video. She works with the latest in video effects equipment, and has brought a unique processor/video synthesizer with her

  • Much of her work is associated with the music clip in images choreographed to a particular particular piece of music.  The music is usually by her brother, James Gillerman, with whom (in conjunction with a third  person) she has a video production company, Viper Optics, in Oakland, California.

  • Until recently, interest in the kind of work Gillerman is doing has been mainly from academic and artistic circles. She was represented in shows at the International Computer Arts Exhibition in Tokyo in 1977 and 1978 and at many galleries and museums in the States.

  • Gillerman has also been active as a performance artist, staging audio visual events using live pre-recorded and synthesized video with dancers and other performers.  A highlight has been the fourth and fifth annual Hooker's Ball in San Francisco.

 

The New TV Magicians

Margaret Werghein Reports

Sydney, Australia, 1983

Jo Ann Gillerman at Metro Television, Sydney, Australia, 1983

  • "Metro Television, Sydney's access video center, brought Jo Ann Gillerman, an American video artist, to Australia for two weeks to give workshops and demonstrations in high-tech video. She brought with her the Sandin [Video} Image Processor, which she built herself from circuits diagrams supplied by its designer, Dan Sandin, a researcher at the University of Illinois, Chicago."

  • ... "creating a new medium for artists. American Jo Ann Gillerman produced the sequence (above) and the cube (opposite/below) which "plays" with an image of Gillerman herself. Such techniques devised by the computer in fractions of a second, are revolutionizing TV image-making.

NORTHERN CALIFORNIA WOMEN IN FILM AND TELEVISION
FREEZE FRAME
AUG/SEPT 1985

WOMEN'S VIDEO ART SHOWCASE

Review by Julie Nolan

(excerpt)

... MOIRÉ by Jo Ann Gillerman went beyond any search for meaning with a kind of visual poetry that is a real treat to watch. Here the imagery itself is the thing: ... a female form - where light, color and editing create an experience not totally unlike viewing certain other forms of modern art.

TheEnterprise

Newspaper

1st Year, No.87  Sunday, May 29, 1983

Hayward/Oakland, California

'Clone Baby'

Art of the future

by David Weinstein

Ms. Gillerman, who heads the film and video department at the California College of Arts and Crafts, built a video synthesizer in 1975 ... Based on designs by electronics expert Dan Sandin, the machine, which ... would be considered low tech today but can still create whirlwinds of imagery on command. ... Ms. Gillerman moved to Oakland in 1976 and formed Viper Optics ... [with] Jim Whiteaker, a graphics artist ... [and] James Gillerman, her brother, studied electronic music at Mills College [and was] a member of Ron Pellegrino's Real Electric Symphony which played "contemporary art music a la John Cage. ... On the arts scene they are already succeeding. The Whitney Museum in New York recently selected several Viper Optics tapes for a show called "Video-Music", which was exhibited at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.  "Clone Baby," one of their most popular tapes, was also shown as a short on TV's "Creature Features." A razzle dazzle series of visual jokes accompanied by a new-wave beat, the tape is fast and fun.

  • Ms. Gillerman, who heads the film and video department at the California College of Arts and Crafts, built a video synthesizer in 1975 ... Based on designs by electronics expert Dan Sandin ...

  • Ms. Gillerman moved to Oakland in 1976 and formed Viper Optics ...

  • In the 80's Viper Optics included: Jim Whiteaker, a graphics artist ... [and] James Gillerman, her brother, who studied electronic music at Mills College [and was] a member of Ron Pellegrino's Real* Electric Symphony which played "contemporary art music a la John Cage.

  • On the arts scene they are already succeeding. The Whitney Museum in New York recently selected several Viper Optics tapes for a show called "Video-Music", which was exhibited at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. 

  • "Clone Baby," one of their most popular tapes, was also shown as a short on TV's "Creature Features." A razzle dazzle series of visual jokes accompanied by a new-wave beat, the tape is fast and fun.

WEIRD OTHER - 1980's
details below in Reference Materials

ON TELEVISION:

Creature Features with John Stanley

KTVU/Channel 2  | 1984
Clone Baby (Viper Video) & LIVE INTERVIEW

Live Video Interview with Jo Ann Gillerman and James Gillerman of Viper Optics

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F8ENzLrmcPk
Original Sound and Visuals by Viper Optics:JoAnn Gillerman, Jim Whiteaker, James Gillerman

PRESENTATION | Tuskegee

BIMS: 2nd Symposium on Biomedical Information Management Systems

Sept. 14-16, 1987

School of Veterinary Medicine, Tuskegee University, Tuskegee, Alabama

Jo Ann Gillerman: Computer Graphics, Video and Composite Image Making

Art, Medical and Scientific Imaging systems

and creating Orchid on cover of IEEE/Computer Graphics)

Presentation/workshop  (Session V11)

PRODUCED FEATURE FILM
Night Feeder
A   Gillerman • Whiteaker • Gillerman Film
Shot on Video
Feature Length -94 min. © 1988

Jim Whiteaker: Director
James Gillerman: Producer, Sound

JoAnn Gillerman: Art Director, Editor

Theatrical Release:
Roxy Theater, San Francisco, CA 1989, 2015
Distribution:
• Exclusive International Distribution, FATW/NY 1990-1993
• All Markets Distribution, Mondo/Bleeding Skull/TX 2015-2019
• All Markets, SRS/NY 2020-current
Reference Materials Below (80's)
Complete Biographies, Reviews and Writings about JoAnn (Jody) GIllerman - the 80's -
are available in "Reference Materials -70's" (below ) - click picture or article na
me to link to page with more information and complete article

Artweek 1985, Oct, Vol 16, Number 34

The Mill Valley Festival by Christine Tamblyn

REVIEW:

(excerpts)

A particular focus this year was the blending of video and performance....

Labat and Heyward also participated in a panel discussion about video and performance, together with Jo Ann Gillerman, Lynn Hershman and Patrick Morgan.  The panel indicated that video performance is in a state of transition - from the exploration of interface between art and life that characterized its early days to a new phase of experimentation with the conjunction between computer graphics and live action.  ...

Fortunately, JoAnn GIllerman's Orchid, which shows baroquely elegant digitized images of orchids dissolving and reforming indicated that computer graphics systems can be used to produce viable alternatives to "video wallpaper".

...

The Oakland Museum of California,
May/June 1990, Volume 13, number 6

 

Video Visions, Electronic Dreams by Liz Kotz
JoAnn Gillerman: "Whispers in a Plane of Light", "Electric Dream" and "Orchid

...Gillerman uses the technology of computer-generated and re-processed images combined with electronic and acoustic music to develop different ways of making abstract visual designs.   Technically innovative and graphically oriented, the three videotapes, display some of the diverse possibilities offered by new computer arts technologies for work in video.

 ... "Gillerman started painting and sculpting, but she soon found her drawing and painting tools were inadequate for what she  visualized. In those media she couldn't have motion, and she couldn't make moving colors. So, about 10 years ago she took to the computer and started experimenting." ...

 

"With the computer," says Gillerman, "I can do things that don't exist in the real world and manipulate them quickly and easily, going though many permutations."

...

JoAnn (Jody) Gillerman on Image Processor in live performance of "Whispers in a Plane of Light", Digicon 83, © 1983 Gillerman

Video of Whispers in a Plane of Light,

Live Performance, is Published/Distributed by Siggraph Video Review, Issue 14, Siggraph '84 Electronic Theater. Gillerman/Piché © 1984

* Note: this entire piece is live, there are no edits, everything is being switched and controlled in real time during performance. There are no edits in the video.

Digicon 83: Context for Computer Art

by Jerry Barenholtz

Interdisciplinary Studies, Simon Fraser University, Vancouver, B.C.,Canada

Digi-Success: Gillerman/Piché

(complete piece)

 Excerpts below and side:

... "ten-minute live performance by Jean Piché on a Fairlight Computer Music Instrument, and Jody Gillerman on a Sandin IP (Video Image Processor). Considering the piece's technical complexity and aesthetic ambitions, it should have been included in the showcase presentation at the Playhouse. However, by virtue of its success, this piece would have been out of place in that presentation."

"Gillerman was to be controlling other [live in real time] aspects of the video. Piché was to modify the sounds and Gillerman was to modify other [live in real time] controls in response to the synthesized images appearing on the monitor. Jim Whiteaker, a colleague of Gillerman's, was running three cameras, and he too was adjusting zoom, f-stops, etc. in response to the images on the screen. In addition to the three camera sources, there as a prerecorded videotape which had been created by Gillerman on an Aurora graphics computer, and there were several grid and band like patterns being generated within the IP (controlled live by Gillerman). The sound sources included both performers chanting into microphones, Piché's live improvisations of the Fairlight, and pre-programed sections which he had prepared for playback through the Fairlight. The total piece thus consisted of a feedback loop containing five video sources, four audio sources, three people, two electronic wonders, and one video projector (for the benefit of the audience), as well as a clutch of assorted cameras, VTR's, speakers, etc. and several miles of hookup wire."

"The overall piece was unquestionably erotic. ... In addition to the twin technical triumphs of getting so many machines working together and controlling such a complex feedback loop without collapse or runaway, Gillerman and Piché presented the audience with a fine, subtle, sensual fantasy, which danced smoothly and confidently around the space bounded in one dimension by the personal and mythical, and in another dimension by the male and female."

"Gillerman was visible to the audience, and it was evident that she was merely rubbing her shoulder with one hand and twiddling knobs on the IP with the other. Likewise, one could see that Piché was just chanting into a microphone and playing keyboards, rather than the "oohing" and "aahing" which appeared on the video monitor.

The piece was very much a study in sensuality and erotic fantasy. ... Piché had direct control over not only the content of the image of himself (position and facial expression), but also over the way it appeared in the overall image. GIllerman too had this type of context/content control: In addition to being herself always on camera, the entire image was being assembled in the IP, which she was running via its front panel controls. [* all in real time]

Because of this control, the performance per se was fully theatrical: The performers appeared in roles, rather than merely as themselves running their respective machines. The roles and the general shape of the script had been agreed upon by the performers long before the performance. The actual elaboration, with respect to the "drama", the music and video, were worked up in a long series of rehearsals leading up to the performance. (The interpretation of the meaning of the performance is due to the present author, and may come as a surprise to the performers.)

...

Without a doubt, the Gillerman/Piché collaboration was the best work at DIGICON 83, and one can only hope that future DIGICONs or other contexts will bring these two and their respective machines together again."

CREATIVE COMPUTING
VOL. 10, NO. 4 / APRIL 1984 / PAGE 172

Complete Article: https://www.atarimagazines.com/creative/v10n4/164_Digicon_83.php
 

Digicon 83. by Paul D. Lehrman.

Jody Gillerman Takes It Off

Whispers in a Plane of Light Live Performance, Digicon 83, Vancouver, Canada

Jo Ann Gillerman (video) in Live Performance with Jean Piché (music)

Sydney Morning Herald
No. 45,368, 1983
Sydney, Australia
"Video for the '80's: Jo Ann Gillerman in Sydney",
by Margaret Werghein

Jo Ann Gillerman, a video artist and producer from California, is in Sydney to unveil some of it.

Gillerman, an assistant professor in video art at California College of Arts and Crafts, has been brought out by Metro Television for two weeks to give workshops in high tech video. She works with the latest in video effects equipment, and has brought a unique processor/video synthesizer with her for use in the workshops and demonstrations.

Much of her work is associated with the music clip in images choreographed to a particular particular piece of music.  The music is usually by her brother, James Gillerman, with whom (in conjunction with a third  person) she has a video production company, Viper Optics, in Oakland, California.

Until recently, interest in the kind of work Gillerman is doing has been mainly from academic and artistic circles. She was represented in shows at the International Computer Arts Exhibition in Tokyo in 1977 and 1978 and at many galleries and museums in the States.

Gillerman has also been active as a performance artist, staging audio visual events using live pre-recorded and synthesized video with dancers and other performers.  A highlight has been the fourth and fifth annual Hooker's Ball in San Francisco.

 

"The New TV Magicians"
Margaret Wertheim Reports

Sydney, Australia, 1983

Jo Ann Gillerman at Metro Television, Sydney, Australia, 1983

Excerpts:

"... Metro Television, Sydney's access video center, brought Jo Ann Gillerman, an American video artist, to Australia for two weeks to give workshops and demonstrations in high-tech video. She brought with her the Sandin [Video} Image Processor, which she built herself from circuits diagrams supplied by its designer, Dan Sandin, a researcher at the University of Illinois, Chicago." ...

"Gillerman, who works from Oakland, California, also uses a digital  animation device called Aurora. ... Gillerman is one of several artists who use the studio at Aurora Systems. Being conversant with the technology behind it she is an ideal person to get the maximum out of this versatile new toy."

Caption: Abstract shapes evolve from one another, creating a new medium for artists. American Jo Ann Gillerman produced the sequence (above) and the cube (opposite/below) which "plays" with an image of Gillerman herself. Such techniques devised by the computer in fractions of a second, are revolutionizing TV image-making.

Grand Prize winner BEST EXPERIMENTAL VIDEO
Hollywood Erotic Film and Video Festival 1986

THEATRICAL RELEASE

UC Theater/Berkeley/CA 1986

DISTRIBUTION: Paramount Home Video

"Best of the Hollywood Erotic Film and Video Festival 1986" on VHS/DVD"

NORTHERN CALIFORNIA WOMEN IN FILM AND TELEVISION
FREEZE FRAME
AUG/SEPT 1985

WOMEN'S VIDEO ART SHOWCASE

Review by Julie Nolan
 

(excerpt)

... MOIRÉ by Jo Ann Gillerman went beyond any search for meaning with a kind of visual poetry that is a real treat to watch. Here the imagery itself is the thing: ... a female form - where light, color and editing create an experience not totally unlike viewing certain other forms of modern art.

'Clone Baby'

Art of the future

by David Weinstein

TheEnterprise

1st Year, No.87  Sunday, May 29, 1983

Hayward/Oakland, California

Ms. Gillerman, who heads the film and video department at the California College of Arts and Crafts, built a video synthesizer in 1975 ... Based on designs by electronics expert Dan Sandin, the machine, which ... would be considered low tech today but can still create whirlwinds of imagery on command. ... Ms. Gillerman moved to Oakland in 1976 and formed Viper Optics ... [with] Jim Whiteaker, a graphics artist ... [and] James Gillerman, her brother, studied electronic music at Mills College [and was] a member of Ron Pellegrino's Real Electric Symphony which played "contemporary art music a la John Cage. ... On the arts scene they are already succeeding. The Whitney Museum in New York recently selected several Viper Optics tapes for a show called "Video-Music", which was exhibited at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.  "Clone Baby," one of their most popular tapes, was also shown as a short on TV's "Creature Features." A razzle dazzle series of visual jokes accompanied by a new-wave beat, the tape is fast and fun.

SIGGRAPH/Japan,
Exhibition of Computer Graphics
in collaboration with
Siggraph 83 Art Exhibition,
Japan
(published/distribution)
Clone Baby Computer Graphics/JoAnn Gillerman
Created on Aurora Video Graphics System and Sandin Image Processor

VID Magazine, Vol. 2, Number 1, 1987
First video revolution Now the video revelation.

ORCHID LIVE PERFORMANCE at SIGGRAPH 86, Dallas Convention Center, TX

Excerpt:

"Because of the precision and flexibility of the Amiga computing power we are beginning to see and hear some astounding video art. At SIGGRAPH 86 in Dallas, the outstanding video artist Jo Ann Gillerman presented "Orchid, A Live Performance". This piece was a daring and sensual montage of live nude performers and real time computer generated graphics. To accomplish this Gillerman used two Amigas, the Fairlight C.V.I., a four minute Deluxe Video script, and the Amiga Live Digitizer."

The SF Bay Guardian: After Dark, Sept 18, 1985, Vol 19, No 48

Bay Area Video is Booming

After Dark - Full Page Cover Image: 'Orchid' by Jo Ann Gillerman

COVER IMAGE and Caption:

Jo Ann Gillerman's 'Orchid' is among the video-art tapes being presented by the Mill Valley Videofest

Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY

Video-Music: New Correlations, 1982 (traveling)

 

"Five Responses to the Political Climate Nov 1980" © 1981 JoAnn Gillerman | Sound: James Gillerman

"What Are you Scared Of? © 1981 visual/music by Viper Optics  

"Lady E" © 1981 visual/music by Viper Optics

(Viper Optics: JoAnn Gillerman, Jim Whiteaker, James Gillerman)

WEIRD OTHER 1980's
Clone Baby by Viper Optics and Interview with James Gillerman and JoAnn Gillerman on Creature Features with John Stanley, Channel 2/KTVU, 1984
On Television:

Creature Features with John Stanley - KTVU/Channel 2 - 1984
Clone Baby | Viper Video – MusicVideo Broadcast and

Live Video Interview with Jo Ann Gillerman and James Gillerman of Viper Optics

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F8ENzLrmcPk

Original Sound and Visuals by Viper Optics:JoAnn Gillerman, Jim Whiteaker, James Gillerman

BIMS: 2nd Symposium on Biomedical Information Management Systems, Sept. 14-16, 1987,

School of Veterinary Medicine, Tuskegee University

Tuskegee, Alabama

           

Jo Ann Gillerman: Computer Graphics, Video and Composite Image Making

Art, Medical and Scientific Imaging systems

Presentation/workshop  (Session V11)

Night Feeder
Gillerman • Whiteaker • Gillerman Film
Shot on Video
Feature Length -94 min.
© 1988

Jim Whiteaker: Director
James Gillerman: Producer, Sound

JoAnn Gillerman: Art Director, Editor

Theatrical Release:
Roxy Theater, San Francisco, CA 1989, 2015

Distribution:
• Exclusive International Distribution, FATW/NY 1990-1993
• All Markets Distribution, Mondo/Bleeding Skull/TX 2015-2019
• All Markets, SRS/NY 2020-current

Podcast:

"Splat from the Past"

an interview with

Jo Ann Gillerman about

Night Feeder

October, 2023

1990's
OVERVIEW: What to cover: Gillerman's summary of the 1990's

The 90's were mostly characterized by interactive works in varied media and forms. Experimentation with a variety of new and custom software for creative interfaces, and sensor- controlled environments:  music/midi Saxophone controlling on-screen images, light (neon) wand moving in free space controlling on-screen elements of video images, floor-sensor controlled images and sounds, all with intent to design (ubiquitous) environments to engage audience interaction in creative user-friendly ways – without using a mouse or keyboard. Interactive Installations include: "EROS INterACTive", "The Sun Drops it's Torch". In performance, this took form of creative ways to non-threateningly  interface with the public in real-time - "AnArchy pARTyCAM", Cyber performance/Fashion). I also used (new) Interactive Digital Video Media - pressing my own CD-ROM discs - to create: Interactive Narratives on Interactive laserdisc and CD-ROM: "Night Feeder Interactive" CD-ROM - Dallas Museum of Art,  "Intijiwana"- an interactive CD-ROM (Bolivian Eclipse/Argentina). (Image of Gillerman in her Studio with Neon Wand). 

A continuing study in human interaction, as Tritonia Feldspar, I did a series of impromptu real-time, public interactions of a social, political nature - interacting in real-life public environments, making sure interactivity was optional, voluntary not forced. I was interactive artist for a virtual month-long residency and public discourse on ArtsWire. (ArtsWire hosts: Judy Malloy & Anna Couey, New York Foundation for the Arts, NYFA (Archived on The Well) created a very early art-centered Internet environment (virtual online) for artists exploring interactive art for public reach.

Eclipses and Active Lava Flows, Art and Science: (Life-long passion/interests since childhood)

Though I had experienced (and immersively recorded) my first total solar eclipse on the WA/OR border in 1979, it wasn't until the 1990's that this became a major focus of my work. Also in the 1990, I experience/recorded - at very close range - the leading edge of actively flowing lava from the volcano, KILAUEA in Hawaii.  Knowing that Kilauea's Lava Flows would be in the narrow path of totality during the 1991 Total Solar Eclipse – I secured access to the geological summit of Mauna Kea (years in advance) to record the Total Solar Eclipse and active lava flows. I designed several custom video camera mounts to pan the horizon 360 degrees for the duration of the total solar eclipse – and others to capture the eclipsing sun. (Celeste Connor's Biography piece refers to this).

Science, mythology, folklore and cultural elements surrounding total solar eclipses and active volcanoes became a focus for much of my work. I travel the world - sometimes to very remote places – to be "in the shadow" – and to capture these experiential, extraordinary, surreal, light-changing (truly awesome!) natural events in varied surround media art forms – with intent to present macro-cosmic phenomena in experiential micro-cosmic art scale to the public. This informs my works for (now) decades – and has led to installations, museum exhibits, multi-channel video, 360/fulldome projection, Early Virtual Reality, Digital Print Light Panels, video and more. (works include: "Volcanic Eclipse" Video, "The Sun Drops its Torch" an interactive, floor sensor-contolled, multimedia, multi-channel immersive installation/environment, and a series of "Kilauea's Pu'uO'o active lava flows" video works and installations over decades.

 

Combining this body of work integrating art, science, culture and often custom anew technologies, led to "Shadow Dance: Interactive Eclipse Exhibit", a floor-sensor controlled installation, at Chabot Space and Science center/Oakland/CA in 2001 (installed for 8 years).

SIGNIFICANT ART WORKS    (1990's)
Interactive MulitMedia, Multi-channel Installation, Sensor-controlled Environments, Real-time Video, Interactive CD-ROM, Interactive Narrative (non-linear),

Improvisational Interactive Cyber Performance and Cyber Fashion, Video


(Reference Materials below)

Volcanic Eciipse - Video  © 1993 JoAnn Gillerman (11 min.)

   References:  (details/articles below)

     • JoAnn GIllerman by Celeste Connor, Women of Vision (below)

     • Artweek, February 1995, Volume 26, Number 2 -  Artists and Technology by Leigh Ann Clifton, p23

     •  San Francisco Focus, Ray Fans by Susan Fry

     •  Blasthaus, San Francisco - April 1995

The Sun Drops its Torch - Interactive Multi-Channel, Multi-lingual, Multi-User floor-pad controlled Installation/Exhibit/Environment © 1994 JoAnn Gillerman and Rob Terry

https://www.vipervertex.com/Exhibits/exhibit_travel-SDT.htm

   References:  (details/articles below)

      •  "JoAnn GIllerman by Celeste Connor", Women of Vision (below)

      • Artweek, February 1995, Volume 26, Number 2 - "O Brave New Digital World!" by Miles Beller, Photo/"EROS Interactive/1994, p15

      • Artweek, February 1995, Volume 26, Number 2 -  Artists and Technology by Leigh Ann Clifton, p23

      • .San Francisco Focus, Ray Fans by Susan Fry

     •  LEONARDO  Journal of the International Society for the Arts, Sciences and Technology, Volume 29  Number 4   1996 - "Words on Works"- Artist Jo Ann Gillerman

      •  ArtsWire: "A Conversation with JoAnn Gillerman", Interactive Art Conference on ArtsWire, OnLine, Aug. 1996 -- Hosted by Judy Malloy and Anna Couey

      *  CyberMonde/CYBERWORLD, Montreal, Quebec

      *  Exploratorium: MultiMedia Playground

      •  Blasthaus "For Immediate Release" - William Linn, Curator

      •  San Francisco Bay Guardian, June 7-13, 1995, Critic's Choice by Harry Roche

   Intereactive Installation installed:

     •  Exploratorium, San Francisco, CA, Special Exhibits in MultiMedia Playground (Feb- Mar, 1994)

     •  Blasthaus Gallery, San Francsico, CA-  "IN (No Sense) DEFENSE" group show of Interactive Tech/Cyber Art. (April-June, 1995)

     •  Cybermonde/Cyberworld, La Cité des Arts et des Nouvelles Technologies de Montreal, Quebec, Canada (May-Sept, 1997)

AnArchy pARTyCAM – improvisational and impromptu public cyber performances and cyber-wear – appearing at public events, the Nixon Library, Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, SFMOMA, Fashion Deisng Center, Be-In, Oliver Art Gallery/CCA, FOrt Mason/SF/CA, and  many others  (1993-1995)

   References:  (details/articles below)

       •  LEONARDO  Journal of the International Society for the Arts, Sciences and Technology, Volume 29  Number 4   1996 - "Words on Works"- Artist Jo Ann Gillerman

        •  ArtsWire: "A Conversation with JoAnn Gillerman", Interactive Art Conference on ArtsWire, OnLine, Aug. 1996 -- Hosted by Judy Malloy and Anna Couey

        • "AnARCHY (partycam) - Cobra Lounge, Fort Mason Center, SF, CA: JoAnn Gillerman and Rob Terry, 

          "Roving interactive perfomance of spontaneous collaboration through live video camera and real-time mobile projection"Art Teco '94 produced by Morph's Outpost on the

           Digital Frontier and Creative Labs Present "Cobra Lounge".

   Appearing Live: Interactie Cyber Performances/Cybe Fashion:

      • Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, 1994

      • Museum of Maodern Art, San Francisco, CA

      • Cowell Theatre, Fort Mason, San Francisco, CA, & Herbst Pavillion, Fort Mason Center, SF/CA, June '94

      •  Nixon Library, Orange County

      •  Digital Art Be-In, The Digital Frontier Exhibition, Verbum, Inc., Fashion Design Center, San Francisco,CA 1994

EROS INterACTive -Real-time video/audio forum on innovations and technology (Be-In, Moscone Center/In No Sense Defense)

   References:  (details/articles below)

      •  JoAnn GIllerman by Celeste Connor", Women of Vision (below)

      • Artweek, February 1995, Volume 26, Number 2 - "O Brave New Digital World!" by Miles Beller, Photo/"EROS Interactive/1994, p15  (photo/EROS Interactive)

     •  LEONARDO  Journal of the International Society for the Arts, Sciences and Technology, Volume 29  Number 4   1996 - "Words on Works"- Artist Jo Ann Gillerman

     •  ArtsWire: "A Conversation with JoAnn Gillerman", Interactive Art Conference on ArtsWire, OnLine, Aug. 1996 -- Hosted by Judy Malloy and Anna Couey

     •  Future Sex, Issue seven  - "Talk DIrty to Me" - EROS INterACTive in the New Sensation Exhibition, Moscone Center, San Francicso, CA

   Interactie Installation:

     •  The Ubiquitous Art Zone, SIG/ACM Multimedia, Hyatt Regency Ball Room, San Francisco, CA, 1994

     •  New Sensation Exhibition, Seybold, Moscone Center, San Francisco, CA, 1993

     •  Digital Art Be-In, The Digital Frontier Exhibition, Verbum, Inc., Fashion Design Center, San Francisco,CA 1994 (Viper Optics)

Kundalini and Baseball - experiments with neon light (wand)contolling images on screen (* image of JoAnn Gillerman  in her studio - above)

   References:  (details/articles below)

        •  ArtsWire: "A Conversation with JoAnn Gillerman", Interactive Art Conference on ArtsWire, OnLine, Aug. 1996 -- Hosted by Judy Malloy and Anna Couey

Night Feeder Interactive: CD-ROM - collaboration with Rob Terry

   References:  (details/articles below)

       •  ArtsWire: "A Conversation with JoAnn Gillerman", Interactive Art Conference on ArtsWire, OnLine, Aug. 1996 -- Hosted by Judy Malloy and Anna Couey

       •  Dallas Museum of Modern Art, Dallas, TX (invited/curated)

Intijiwana: Interactive CD-ROM - Buenos Aires, Argentina, 1996 (Interactive '94 Total Solar Eclipse in Bolivia)

   References:  (details/articles below)

     •   JoAnn GIllerman by Celeste Connor", Women of Vision (below)

     • Artweek, February 1995, Volume 26, Number 2 -  Artists and Technology by Leigh Ann Clifton, p23

     •  ArtsWire: "A Conversation with JoAnn Gillerman", Interactive Art Conference on ArtsWire, OnLine, Aug. 1996 -- Hosted by Judy Malloy and Anna Couey

     •   II Festival Internacional de Video y Artes Electronicas, Buenos Aires - Argentina, 1996, CD-ROM, Teatro General San Martin, Organized by Gobierno de la Ciudad de

        Buenos Aires Secretaria de Cutura

 

Social Practice/Outreach Art Project: 

Hey, Listen Up! An Urban Eco-Literacy Project on Environmental Racism/Justice, Sponsored by Urban Habitat Program of the Earth island Institute

    •  Project Collaboration with Belvie Rooks, and Carl Anthony of Urban Habitat

    •  Interactive CD-ROM, High-school Curriculum, Interactive Multimedia Workshops - onsite in Watts/Compton, Los Angeles, California

   References:  (details/articles below)

      •  JoAnn GIllerman by Celeste Connor", Women of Vision ("expanding her themes into Community based projects: ...below)

Electro-Healing Interactive Installation at Siggraph: A collaborative installation with my New Media Arts Class in Tomorrow's Realities (light sensor controlled environment)

    •  JoAnn GIllerman by Celeste Connor", Women of Vision ("expanding her themes into Community based projects: ...below)

    • ACM/SIggraph 95 Proceedings Electro-Healing by JoAnn Gillerman 

Biographies and Writings ABOUT JoAnn (Jody) Gillerman
Overview of the 1990's
Complete Biographies, Reviews and Writings about JoAnn (Jody) GIllerman - the 90's -
are available in "Reference Materials -90's" (below ) - click picture/article name to link to page with more information and complete article
  • Bullet Points (below writing) signify important Key Points

JoAnn Gillerman by Celeste Connor

Women of Vision Journal, Summer 1997 Season

Complete Article: JoAnn Gillerman by Celeste Connor

(excerpts below)

The early '80's were also significant in Gillerman's development of new subject matter for her art. On February 26, 1979, she had witnessed in person a total solar eclipse at the Washington-Oregon border. Not only did she capture the event on several videotapes, but this was also the first time she employed a panning device. The new method, which Gillerman still uses in recording such celestial events, supplied the artist with unique compositions and novel views of the environment. Gillerman's passion for the optical pleasures of extraordinary astronomical occurances magnetized her to the lrgest island of Hawaii in July 11, 1991 to observe and record a total solar eclipse. This occasion is represented in the six minute video Volcanic Eclipse that will be broadcast as part of the Women of Vision series on KCSM-TV. The same spectacular confluence of  natural events is also the subject of an interactive installation by Gillerman titled The Sun Drops its Torch, a ten monitor multi-channel interactive environment that was featured at the Blasthaus Gallery in San Francisco, in 1995. The original footage and sound was recorded on location by Gillerman and Rob Terry, with whom she often collaborates. 

In some sense, Volcanic Eclipse inaugurated a new phase of Gillerman's work. The neon glow of the molten lava and the unique quality of light that emanates from the flow inspired the higher pitched palette of subsequent works. As viewers will see, Gillerman's two hour hours of on-sight videotaped material has been meticulously edited. The chosen six minutes of remaining imagery highlight the visual splendor of the coincidence of a total solar eclipse with t eruption of an active volcano. The most visually compelling and memorable shots remain for our pleasure and education. Without the mediation of this image maker, how many of us would have dared to witness this profound  - but also dangerous - event? Not only is Volcanic Eclipse marked by the obvious care and patience that accompanied the artful selection of images from raw footage, but it is also enhanced by the use of a 360 degree panning device that Gillerman and Terry use to capture an "in-the-round" experiential, quality for their viewers. This "surround" effect is especially forceful when the imagery is presented in the installation format: The Sun Drops its Torch.

In the six minute videotape, the primary effect of the pan is the notably unusual compositions if affords. In the early 1920's, the American photographer Alfred Stieglitz conducted a series of experiments originally known as Songs of the Sky and later called Equivalents. In the early series and a later version, Stieglitz pointed his camera up into the heavens, frequently omitting a horizon line and other landmarks that traditionally aided viewers in locating their "footing" in the pictorial landscape.  Gillerman's Eclipse extends these early panning experiments in a more exotic climate but with similar effect.  Her unique framing of the land and sky permits us to view them - and thus conceive of them - freshly. Volcanic Eclipse is a celebration of nature that provides a privileged view of an extraordinary confluence of cosmic  events. It thereby challenges our everyday habits of mind by setting the routine thoughts of our more mundane daily events with in the frame of a much wider perspective than our imaginations generally provide.

Gillerman's interest was ignited by the results of the Hawaiian experiment, and so she and Terry chased down another eclipse in a remote are of the Bolivian Andes in November 1994. This resulted in the interactive CD Rom Intijiwana. In October 1995, these collaborators recorded another eclipse in Fatehpur Sikri, India, a well preserved Moghul city of the 16th century about 40 kilometers west of Agra, site of the Taj Mahal. They hope to follow and document similar planetary events to the Carribbean in 1998 and Turkey 1999.

In the nineties, Gillerman continues her interest in interactivity and the audiences' relation to new technology and media. Not only does she keep current in the newest developments of the computer arts, but she is expanding her themes into community based projects that raise different issue of the environment than those of the cosmic explorations.

   ------ Written by Celeste Connor, art historian

Artweek

February 1995, Volume 26, Number 2

O Brave New Digital World!

by Miles Beller       

Photo/Caption: "EROS Interactive, 1994, Multimedia interactive installation", p15

Technology and Art Section

 Artists & Technology: some issues of Individual application

  by Leigh Ann Clifton

        (Multimedia Artist/JoAnn Gillerman- p23)

Multimedia artist JoAnn Gillerman, who currently teaches at CSU, Hayward, and California College of Arts and Crafts, began experimenting with interactive technologies some twenty years ago, employing pressure sensors and a video imaging processing machine.

One current work-in-progress, The Sun Drops Its Torch, in collaboration with Rob Terry, uses footage of active volcanic lava flow and the 1991 total solar eclipse with an interactive, multi-user system designed to let viewers reconfigure the images, sounds and fragments of the story simply by triggering floor sensors placed around the installation space. A recent addition will include footage shot last November in Bolivia. Along with the interactive installation, Gillerman also has a prototype CD-ROM version of Torch which she hopes to make available on mass basis.

  — by Leigh Ann Clifton

Photo/Caption: "EROS Interactive, 1994, Multimedia interactive installation", p15

San Francisco Focus
(Re-branded as San Francisco Magazine in Oct. 1997)
Aug 1997 issue

DARK SIDE OF THE SUN:

ECLIPSE CHASERS ROB TERRY AND JOANN GILLERMAN

Tales of the Cities: Edited by Leslie Crawford

Ray Fans by Susan Fry

Excerpts:

It's 3:36 PM in the abandoned city of Fatehpur Sikri, India. Rob Terry and JoAnn Gillerman wait breathlessly in the courtyard of a rose-colored mosque, their cameras pointed toward the sky.

...

Some might argue that however sublime the vision, once you've seen one solar eclipse, you've seen them all. Gillerman says these naysayers are missing out on each eclipse's startling and unique beauty. "Every one is different. In Hawaii, the corona was bluish white. In India, it was the color of steel, with radiating streamers of light." 

 

And, however briefly, eclipses transform the world. "Everything turns golden, winds pick up, it can rain wiithout warning, stars appear in the middle of the day"

...

While Gillerman was the first addict, she says, Terry was an easy convert. Together ... their company, Viper Vertex, produces multimedia exhibits and CR-ROMs so others can see, or rather not see, the light.

LEONARDO 

Journal of the International Society for the Arts, Sciences and Technology

The MIT Press

Volume 29  Number 4   1996 

Complete "Words on Works: JoAnn Gillerman"

https://www.jstor.org/stable/i270980

(and links below)

Words on Works:

Artist: JoAnn Gillerman

The Sun Drops its Torch, Eros Interactive, AnArchy Partycam

Words On Works

edited by Judy Malloy

Words on Works was a series of short, informal statements about new artworks in which art and technology coexist or merge. In the spirit of Leonardo, the information in Words on Works is what the artists themselves have chosen to say about their own work. In some of these statements, rather than describing the work in detail, the artists use nontraditional language that echoes the work itself and is expressive of their vision. By introducing these artists, Words on Works operates in the same way that alternative art spaces operate in the gallery-museum milieu.

Note: Words on Works is now presented in the journal under the "Artists' Statements" section, edited by the journal editors.

Words on Works

JoAnn Gillerman

Excerpts: (from pages 265-267)
 

My works are environments meant to fully envelope a viewer/ participant in an electronic space and time. To achieve this totality, I address aspects of interactivity, sensitivity to spatial arrangement, sculptural elements and socialization of audiences. Though context, presentation and content have varied (including narrative and non-narrative aspects), exploration of creative new ways to engage in an interactive multimedia environment has remained my constant interest. Current works concentrate on communication and cooperation through interactive installations that use imagery and concepts applicable to varying peoples, cultures and the Earth. Sometimes the content deals with private issues in a public context, and other times a public issue in a private space. I design installations for cooperative multicultural group interaction (i.e. simultaneous use by several participants), as well as individual experiences. Through seductive interfaces that allow viewers/participants ' personal voices to become part of real-time interaction, these pieces question the limited or open parameters of interactivity. I believe that all interactive works respond to some pre-determined parameters, so it is the responsibility and concern of the individual artist to decide what and how much open-ended interaction is desirable or appropriate to the work. Many of my current works try to give a significant portion of this open-ended interaction to its participants. Three recent works include The Sun Drops Its Torch, EROS INterACTive, and AnArchy pARTyCam. All three deal with issues of open-ended interactions using various computer platforms and unusual audience/media interfaces.

...

                 As the Sun walks the bridge between summer and winter solstices, sometimes he simply drops his torch and thus an eclipse occurs.

                —Bella Coola of Northwest Canada

...

I am committed to a multidisciplinary, multicultural and multimedia approach to art making. My work often deals with interactivity, audience participation using intuitive innovative interfaces, multi-user systems that promote cooperative unique experiences and observations of collective group dynamics. Through the use of new technologies and computers, the interfaces remain simple to use and non-technological. This is meant to maximize audience participation and creative experiences in a non-threatening way. Some of these interfaces have included, but are not limited to: floor sensors, light wands, musical instruments that "play" images and other provocative intuitive replacements for the more traditional computer mouse and keyboard. Currently I am working with real-time input (video and audio) from participants for open-ended interactive experiences.

THE SAN FRANCISCO BAY GUARDIAN

March 2, 1994, Vol. 28, No.22

"Critic's Choice: Art" by Harry Roche

'Color in the Shadows:  Bay Area Cyberart'

Photo is: Jo Ann Gillerman in AnArchy pARTyCam,

Live Cyber Performance and Cyber Fashion

* AnArchy pARTyCAM appearing Live

JoAnn Gillerman

AnArchy pARTyCAM

Yerba Buena Gardens

Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, San Francisco, CA

1994

* AnArchy pARTyCAM appearing Live

ArtsWire:

"A Conversation with JoAnn Gillerman"

Hosts: Judy Malloy & Anna Couey, New York Foundation for the Arts, NYFA

Interactive Art Conference on ArtsWire, OnLine

a very early virtual online conversation and residency  on artists exploring interactive art for public reach

Aug. 1996

Live/Published/Transcribed/Archived on * The Well at link below:

The Well: https://people.well.com/user/couey/interactive/gillerman.html | Context Reference: https://people.well.com/user/couey/interactive/guests.html

( * The Well: Started by Stewart Brand and Larry Brilliant in 1985, The Whole Earth 'Lectronic Link, The WELL, is one of the oldest continuously operating virtual communities. By 1993 it had 7,000 members, a staff of 12, and gross annual income of $2 million. A 1997 feature in Wired magazine called it "The world's most influential online community. It is best known for its Internet forums, (In 2012, when it was last publicly offered for sale, it had 2,693 members. - Wikepedia )

A few Excerpts from a live month-long INTERNET virtual residency:

Judy Malloy
Anna and I are pleased to welcome JoAnn Gillerman - this month's guest on Interactive.

JoAnn Gillerman owns a media arts company Viper Optics, which has been producing video, audio, Installations and interactive environments for over 15 years. She describes her works that include interactivity, "sensitivity to spatial arrangement", sculptural elements, and socialization of audiences as "environments, meant to fully envelope a viewer/participant in an electronic space and time." She also teaches at California College of Arts and Crafts - most recently a course in "Interactive Storytelling and CD-ROM"

Judy Malloy
Welcome Jody! To begin with, can you talk a little about how and why you began making interactive art?

Anna Couey
Hi Jody! I ...  was fascinated to read about THE SUN DROPS ITS TORCH in particular in "Words on Works." Will you be making the works themselves available over the web?

Beth Kanter, Arts Wire
Welcome! Thanks for the wonderful introduction!

[On Interactive Arena, varied media, optional vs. forced interactivity, human interaction ] ..........

Judy Malloy
Jody, I saw you perform around 10 years ago at CADRE.  ... it was based on light - sensor-triggered light, I think. You also talk about the elements as providing a kind of interactivity in your early work. This leads (it seems to me) coherently into your current solar eclipse documentation. Also, I think the diverse elements in your previous works are integrated/come to maturity in your current CD-ROM pieces. THE SUN DROPS ITS TORCH has added components that I like - how other cultures view natural phenomena, your personal treks in search of eclipses (it would be great to hear more about these!) And these diverse strains are integrated well in the CD-ROM medium. I also was very impressed with the way a large amount of narrative and visual information was integrated and NIGHT FEEDER.

Can you talk a little more about working with CD-ROM? And about how you use what you call the "interactive arena" in these works?

Anna Couey

What led you from making responsive environments that you participated in thru your own art making to responsive environments for others? I mean, I can readily see the aesthetic part of that transition - & would love to know more about how you view it from a political perspective! ... also interesting to read your thoughts about optional vs. forced interactivity. So many things to assess in this shifty territory of art that depends on the relationship you build with participants to really bring out its full meaning!

JoAnn Gillerman
Anna...
When I was exploring environments that I designed for myself, or performed in, I also became interested in how others interacted with me and/or the environment. We are in real life always interacting with our environments - why not in art?

Especially “informative” was when I first wore a prominent mustache around Chicago. (It did, I might add, totally match the color of my hair and the shape went well with my face!) I learned a lot about people! I went on my daily activities - to the bank, downtown on route through Chicago, on public transit, grocery stores, etc.  ... As Tritonia Feldspar, I again wore the same mustache here and around the Bay area. One semester, I taught an entire class as Tritonia Feldspar. My students recognized that when the mustache was on I was Tritonia - and when not on - I was Jody. I wore it around town .... in public spaces. These “real-time interaction pieces” - a continuing study in human interactions, I view as political in nature and interactive (without much tech!). Questions of gender, normality, and identity come to my mind! (though others may see simply drama and theater!). In cyberspace gender switching is much easier than in non-cyberspace!

About optional vs. forced interactivity ... I felt wearing a mustache was quite benign and quite personal - Not aggressively requiring interaction. i.e. optional! However, it was surprising how many people considered it a direct assault on something! ...

 

Anna Couey
Lots of responses to what you've posted flew thru my head as I
read your words Jody! Was interested to read about your moustache performances, and would love to hear more about some of those encounters. I can imagine how some people would consider it an assault - gender coding is surprisingly firmly imbedded. Do you think the moustache caused people to think differently about their assumptions about gender?

Nice comment on voluntary vs. forced interactivity. I usually fall into the voluntary interactivity camp, but like the way you took it back to real life. Gives the freedom for the work to be what it is...I guess for me it also seems necessary to be aware of the implications of the way that interactivity is done, since much of the interactive work I've organized treads outside the art context.

JoAnn Gillerman

Anna ...Do I think the moustache caused people to think differently about their assumptions about gender? I hope so!!!

[on ... Media or Medium] ..........

 

Timothy Collins
That last post got my thinking along the line of medium. Is a CD a medium? Or is it a publishing media? is video tape a medium? What is the diff between publishing op and actual creative media? Is the idea of media irrelevant at this point?

Personally It strikes me as a distribution tool. The difference between live music and memorex. Art students....... shouldn't be worrying about distribution. Shouldn't they be taking chances in the machine saving the good stuff to a portable HD. and DOING MORE! But then again, lotsa storage on that little CD.

Looking forward to the response on this!

Judy Malloy
I don't work with CD but I think the questions and blurring of lines might be similar to what is happening with the web. Certainly Night Feeder is an actual work - not a distribution tool. One reason I was interested was because I thought there might be parallels with what is happening with the web.

JoAnn Gillerman
I would say that video is the medium, and video tape is the means of distributing the medium if it is recorded (i.e. not live video installation involving no tape!). In that light, CD is a convenient way to distribute interactive works. Interactive works could be distributed on HD, though this would be quite expensive, fragile and inefficient in terms of cost per memory.

I use Interactive CD as a medium and often it is the only presentation of the art work in itself. I also use CD-ROM as storage - like a very large removable disk. It is a wonderful storage medium, small, convenient, and holds lots of data, for a relatively low cost.

I’d say CD is a publishing media at this point in time. This could easily change in a few years, but works of art that now reside on CD-ROM may be considered artwork unto itself. Artists often change mediums, and stay consistent with their concepts and/or images, etc.. I don’t think the work is defined by the medium, though it is usually presented or displayed in the medium. Inotherwords, Art becomes fixed once it has been created and committed to a medium, until it may be re-worked in another medium.

At this particular point in time, and I think the time in this case is quite relevant, CD may be - even if not considered a medium, considered a relatively efficient means of presenting interactive works that have been designed and created on a computer. Interactive works may be distributed or presented on several different media - CD is only one - but a good one for distribution - small, compact, memory efficient, and may be cross platform, etc. I think there will be other media, that are currently in the works - that will become an efficient means for presenting interactive works. I am stressing interactive because I think this is the area where the art (or CD in some cases) becomes the medium unto itself. This is a much larger issue - raises many questions - and is changing constantly with technology. Where is the art on-line? What is the medium? The concept becomes important, the medium is whatever works!

Conversations with Interactive Artists

The artists listed here joined the Interactive Art Conference for virtual residencies lasting one month. The conversations that emerged provide insights on the artists' work and approach to interactivity; and explore issues of art and audience, context, and purpose in interactive art. They are reproduced for the web with permission of all participants.

For information about republishing, please contact Anna Couey and Judy Malloy.  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judy_Malloy

Malloy worked for Arts Wire, a program of the New York Foundation for the Arts (NYFA) from its early origins in 1993. She began serving as editor of the online periodical Arts Wire Current in March 1996. She continued as editor through the periodical's name change to NYFA Current in November, 2002, until March 2004.

Blasthaus

For Immediate Release

William Linn, Curator

San Francisco — April 30, 1995

BLASTHAUS, a gallery dedicated to artists using technology, opened its doors Thursady, April 27, wiith a premiere exhibition titled IN [NO SENSE] DEFENSE — a group show of nine Bay Area Artist. An energetic crowd packed the third floor of 217 Second Street for the opening reeption of the show which features interactive sculpture, robotics, video, and multimedia art.

 

The show challenges our preconceived notions about how technogy should integrate in our lives, said curator William Linn. Calling the show an "interactive Dada" experience, Linn added, "I want people to come away from this space having some sense of fullfillment in the participatory aspect oof the art." The fact that we are living in a digital age where machines and technology are ofteh taken for granted as part of everyday life, coupled with the Bay Area's notorius hi-tech industry, has created a hotbed of artists embracing technooogy. BLASTHAUS  is the first  gallery too open in San Francisco to showcse exclusively tech-art. New York currenly is home to two such cyber-galleries, which just opened in the past year.

Featuring the work of Bruce Cannon, Ken Rinaldo, JoAnn Gillerman and Rob Terry, Christian Ristow, Marque Cornblatt, Adam Savage, DC Spensley, and Jim Short, the exhibition includes a broad range of media that artist are incorporating in their work today. From an interactive video installation with 10 monitors to concepually based work incorporating live tubiflex worms, the show attempts to provide a range of media that is both responsive to viewer presence and engaging by its content.

Photo: JoAnn Gillerman

Blasthaus

For Immediate Release

William Linn, Curator

San Francisco Bay Guardian
June 7-13, 1995
"our 20th anniversary special"
 

Critic's Choice: Art

by Harry Roche

excerpt:

Blasthaus burst onto the local artscape rather quiently last month. Codirectors William Linn and Victoria Dawson conceived it as a venue for toda's techie artist, the city's first bonaa fide cyberart space. Its inaugural installatioin is "In (No Sense) Defense," which features (mostly) interactive artworks by nine Bay Area technophiles (Bruce Cannon, Ken Rinaldo, JoAnn Gillerman and Rob Terry, Chrisian Ristow, Marque Cornblatt, ada Savage, DC Spensley, and Jim Short). Survival reasearch Laboratories member Ristow has created the in-you-face-Claw, which melds technology and testosterone as it morps into an ear-ritating robitic wildcat that spits and spars when unleasehed.   ...

Future Sex

Issue Seven
1994

EROS INterACTive: a real-time interactive kiosk

UI Interface Screen (Gillerman © 1993

Talk Dirty to Me

When artists JoAnn Gillerman and Rob Terry set out to create a patch-work of public opinion on erotica in the techno age, they figured the best way to get folks to open up was with a little seduction. THe result was EROS INterACTive, an electronic kiosk that solicits candid commentary through provocatively pictured help screens that whisper encouragements like "Come play with me: and "Touch me here". Created on the Silicon Graphics Indy, EROS coaxes users to videotape their own musings about eroticism and interactivity, as well as peek at messages left by other participants. It's user-flirty approach works; when EROS was shown at the New Sensation Exhibition in San Francisco last fall, over 250 people sounded off in just three days. "We thought this seemed like a good way to have a humanish interface" says Gillerman. Maybe it's easier telling your thoughts to a computer if it happens to be a smooth talker.

                                                                                                                        Mary Elizabeth Williams, Associate Editor

The Exploratorium presents MULTIMEDIA PLAYGROUND

February 12 - March 20, 1994

SPECIAL EXHIBITS

A collection of rotating installations, art projects, and featured presentations.

"The Sun Drops its Torch is an interactive installation produced by JoAnn Gillerman and Rob Terry. The installation is inspired by two natural  events, a total solar eclipse and an active volcanic lava flow, which occurred simultaneously in Hawaii on July 11, 1991. The installation is designed to promote cooperation between multiple users. Participants "play" the environment, directing images, sounds, and fragments of stories by walking around the space and stepping on floor sensors."    — written by Exploratorium for Special Exhibits

(A ring of 24 video monitors is surrounded by 6 floor sensors distributed around the installation space. As the floor sensors are triggered by visitors, images and sounds are layered, transformed  and recombined to form a constantly changing collective image and layered sounds.)

WEIRD OTHER - 1990's
details below in Reference Materials

PRESENTS TO USIS, CALCUTTA, INDIA
Jo Ann Gillerman presents work
United States Information Service
Calcutta, India

Dec. 1995
Invited
"Time and Talent" Group at USIS American Center in Calcutta, India, Nov. 17, 1995

United States Information Service

Calcutta, India

December, 1995

Ms. Jo Ann Gillerman

"The audience found the description and examples of your work, "The Sun Drops its Torch", extremely interesting. It was their first exposure to an electronic art presentation. The use of computers in creating art is an area very new in India. Since the solar eclipse was a rare experience for many Calcuttans, your presentation generated a grater interest in the event.

I congratulate you on the skill and creativity that have gone into this presentation. I greatly appreciate your willingness to offer this program and share your experience with Calcuttans."

INTERACTIVE ART RESIDENCY AND CONFERENCE ONLINE 

(links to ArtsWire Section above that has excerpts from the month-long Internet conversations)

Live/Published/Transcribed/Archived   (complete transcript) and on * The Well at link below:

ArtsWire:

"A Conversation with JoAnn Gillerman"

Hosts: Judy Malloy & Anna Couey, New York Foundation for the Arts, NYFA

Aug. 1996

 

Invited

 

a very early virtual online conversation and residency  on artists exploring interactive art for public reach

 

The Well: https://people.well.com/user/couey/interactive/gillerman.html | Context Reference: https://people.well.com/user/couey/interactive/guests.html

 

( * The Well: Started by Stewart Brand and Larry Brilliant in 1985, The Whole Earth 'Lectronic Link, The WELL, is one of the oldest continuously operating virtual communities. By 1993 it had 7,000 members, a staff of 12, and gross annual income of $2 million. A 1997 feature in Wired magazine called it "The world's most influential online community. It is best known for its Internet forums, (In 2012, when it was last publicly offered for sale, it had 2,693 members. - Wikepedia )

ELECTRO-HEALING

Collaborative  interdisciplinary interactive and virtual healing Environment

Tomorrow's Realities, Siggraph 1993

JoAnn Gillerman Director and Professor

Collaborators: The Experimental Media Class at California College of Arts and Crafts, Oakland, CA

Theme: Universal concepts, multicultural wold view, political social ethical aesthetic concerns ranging from racism (Basic Black) to virtual spirituality (Kundalini & Baseball).

Electro-Healing by JoAnn Gillerman

Computer Graphics | Visual Proceedings - a publication of ACM SIGGTRAPH. 1993 p.196

INTERACTIVE INSTALLATION AT CYBERMONDE, QUEBEC

Cyberworld

"CYBERWORLD which opens on May 30, is a permanent multimedia edutainment space for the general public, for young and old. CYBERWORLD invites those who are fascinated or disturbed by the future to take a closer look at the revolution in progress.

Once again, artists interested in experimentation and research are exploring the specific qualities of networks, creating collective and participatory work that can be seen by people all over the world. The CD-ROM, the multimedia tool par excellence, mostly know for games, reference, scientific and artistic content, is discovering its own artist and developing its own aesthtic. And, last bu not least, the development of interactive softward by artist themselves has given rise to original creations in whihc content takes precedence over technology. This is a major change."    

                                                                              — CYBERWORLD  1997

"The Sun Drops its Torch", JoAnn Gillerman & Rob Terry

Paysage explosif d'Hawaii. Installation vidéo interactive.

Découvrez de nouvelles formes d'interactiveité.

Explosive Hawaiin landscape. Interactive video Installation. Discover new froms of interactivity.

May -Sept, 1997

JoAnn Gillerman, a California based artist, works in interactive multimedia installation, CD-ROM, Internet, video and performance. She is Professor of electronic arts at the CA College of Arts and Crafts. Since 1975, her interdisciplinary often interactive works have been extensively shown nationally and internationally,

                                                        — CYBERWORLD  1997

"YLEM as I Saw It in the 1990's"
(movie - 22 min.)
directed/produced by Be
verly Keiber, 2023
(Beverly Kleiber was president of YLEM / Artists Using Science and Technology for 14 years beginning in 1985.)

"A group of pioneer Artists using Science and Technology in the 1990s as remembered by Beverly Kleiber aka Reiser."

Jody Gillerman section: 7:50m- 9:50m (2 min total)

Lava video and Interactive Eclipse Exhibit

01-Ylem-movie-title.jpg

"YLEM was a grass-roots group of artists enamored of the possibility of blurring the boundary between the viewer and the art object using newly emerging interactive media. The viewer becomes participant was the mantra of the time." Beverly Kleiber

 

"YLEM as I Saw It in the 1990's" (movie)

includes the following artists:

Roman Verostko, Ken Rinaldo, Jody Gillerman, Jim Pallas, Lucia Grossberger Morales, Beverly Kleiber aka Reiser, Frank Pietronigro, and Roger Malina.

02-Ylem-movie-title-beverlyKleiber.jpg
03-Ylem-movie-JodyG.jpg
04-Ylem-movie-jagphoto.jpg
05-Ylem-movie-lava.jpg
07-Ylem-movie-EclipseExhibit.jpg
08-Ylem-movie-JAG-EclipseExhibit.jpg
09-Ylem-movie-indiaEclipse.jpg
11-Ylem-movie-HItelecopeCamEclipse.jpg
Reference Materials Below (90's)
Complete Biographies, Reviews and Writings about JoAnn (Jody) GIllerman - the 90's -
are available in "Reference Materials -90's" (below ) - click picture or article na
me to link to page with more information and complete article

Artweek, February 1995, Volume 26, Number 2

        Photo/Caption: "EROS Interactive, 1994, Multimedia interactive installation", p15

        Multimedia Artist/JoAnn Gillerman- p23

"Women of Vision," a six-week series showcasing films and videos by the Bay Area's best female filmmakers, debuts Wednesday night on PBS station KCSM, and continues through July 16.

Hosted by TV journalist Jan Yanehiro, "Women of Vision," which is in its fourth year, includes documentaries, features, animated short films and videos, with discussions with their creators. Each installment shows at 8 p.m. on Wednesday, and is repeated at 10 p.m. Saturdays.

Complete Article: JoAnn Gillerman by Celeste Connor

Excerpts:

JoAnn Gillerman by Celeste Connor

JoAnn Gillerman is a Berkeley-based electronic media artist and educator who has taught at the California College of Arts and Crafts since 1976. Her artwork is impressively broad in range, including video production, interactive installation, interactive CD Rom, internet on-line design and performance art. Like most artist of her generation, Gillerman's early art training was in the fine arts, principally painting and printmaking.  Yet, by the time she received her MFA from the Art Institute of Chicago in 1975, she had already begun to experiment in the new media of video and performance. Although they were created before artists had access to personal sized computers and appropriate software, the early works were interactive in nature. Gillerman has always been and remains interested in stimulating audience participation.

Gillerman started building a Sandin [video] Image Processor in 1976 before migrating to California. The Sandin, which she used to manipulate video signals in many subsequent live performances, was completed in 1977. Music and sound have always been important components in her art.  Gillerman's first series of performances, dating between 1976-78, were accompanied by audio created by the Real* Electronic Symphony. In 1978 Gillerman was selected to broadcast excerpts of her work on KRON-TV the San Francisco NBC affiliate. In that same year, Video Free America featured her multi-channel installation "Predominantly Fafnir", in a one woman show. In 1980, David Ross curated a one woman show of her work at the Pacific Film Archive at the University Art Museum in Berkeley. During this period her pioneering work was also broadcast in Canada and Australia.

...

Viewed broadly, Gillerman's art of the 1970's ... explorations of relationship of visual imagery and music, live real-time ... Gillerman's signature themes of erotic and sensual elements are important threads that connect Gillerman's work over time ... Carried into the eighties ... Whispers in a Plane of Light Live Performance  ... Orchid [Computer Graphics]... The Sun Drops its Torch [installation]...   In the nineties ... continues her interest interactivity, audiences' relation to new technologies and media ...

In some sense, Volcanic Eclipse inaugurated a new phase of Gillerman's work ... a celebration of nature that provides a privileged view of an extraordinary confluence of cosmic events ...

"Volcanic Eclipse, a stunning video of both a total eclipse and an active volcanic eruption by JoAnn Gillerman ...
                                            - Joanne Kelly 
                                             Artistic Director
LEONARDO  Journal of the International Society for the Arts, Sciences and Technology
Volume 29  Number 4   1996       https://www.jstor.org/stable/i270980
Words on Works: 


JoAnn Gillerman (Author: Words on Works)
The Sun Drops its Torch, Eros Interactive, AnArchy Partycam

... three works (installations and improvisation Cyber Performance) environments that fully envelope a viewer/ participant in an electronic space and time - address aspects of interactivity, sensitivity to spatial arrangement, sculptural elements and socialization of audiences.

Published by The MIT Press, Leonardo has become the leading international peer-reviewed journal on the use of contemporary science and technology in the arts and music and the application and influence of the arts and humanities on science and technology.

 

Leonardo is interested in work that crosses the artificial boundaries separating contemporary arts and sciences. Featuring illustrated articles written by artists about their own work as well as articles by historians, theoreticians, philosophers and other researchers, the journal is particularly concerned with issues related to the interaction of the arts, sciences and technology. Leonardo focuses on the visual arts and also addresses music, video, performance, language, environmental and conceptual arts—especially as they relate to the visual arts or make use of the tools, materials and ideas of contemporary science and technology. New concepts, materials and techniques and other subjects of general artistic interest are covered, as are legal, economic and political aspects of art.

https://leonardo.info/leonardo

DARK SIDE OF THE SUN:

ECLIPSE CHASERS ROB TERRY AND JOANN GILLERMAN

San Francisco Focus: Aug 1997 issue, Featured Artist Profile/pictures

Tales of the Cities: Edited by Leslie Crawford

Ray Fans by Susan Fry

Excerpts:

" It's 3:36 PM in the abandoned city of Fatehpur Sikri, India. Rob Terry and JoAnn Gillerman wait breathlessly in the courtyard of a rose-colored mosque, their cameras pointed toward the sky.

...

Some might argue that however sublime the vision, once you've seen one solar eclipse, you've seen them all. Gillerman says these naysayers are missing out on each eclipse's startling and unique beauty. "Every one is different. In Hawaii, the corona was bluish white. In India, it was the color of steel, with radiating streamers of light." 

And, however briefly, eclipses transform the world. "Everything turns golden, winds pick up, it can rain wiithout warning, stars appear in the middle of the day"

 

While Gillerman was the first addict, she says, Terry was an easy convert. Together ... their company, Viper Vertex, produces multimedia exhibits and CR-ROMs so others can see, or rather not see, the light.

WARNING!  SAFE SOLAR ECLIPSE VIEWING!
This was a "staged" in-studio photo.  When in the field capturing an eclipse with our custom camera recording equipment, it is safe and more practical to watch partial phases on our video display screens - and through telescope grade solar filters. Solar Eclipse Viewing safety IS important. Never look directly at the sun, EXCEPT during totality.

YLEM Journal, Volume 17, Issue 12, 1997 –

"A Look at Siggraph '97" by JoAnn Gillerman

"The Sun Drops its Torch", JoAnn Gillerman & Rob Terry

Paysage explosif d'Hawaii. Installation vidéo interactive.

Découvrez de nouvelles formes d'interactiveité.

Explosive Hawaiin landscape. Interactive video Installation. Discover new froms of interactivity.

Cyberworld

"CYBERWORLD which opens on May 30, is a permanent multimedia edutainment space for the general public, for young and old. CYBERWORLD invites those who are fascinated or disturbed by the future to take a closer look at the revolution in progress.

Once again, artists interested in experimentation and research are exploring the specific qualities of networks, creating collective and participatory work that can be seen by people all over the world. The CD-ROM, the multimedia tool par excellence, mostly know for games, reference, scientific and artistic content, is discovering its own artist and developing its own aesthtic. And, last bu not least, the development of interactive softward by artist themselves has given rise to original creations in whihc content takes precedence over technology. This is a major change."    

                                                                              — CYBERWORLD  1997

JoAnn Gillerman, a California based artist, works in interactive multimedia installation, CD-ROM, Internet, video and performance. She is Professor of electronic arts at the CA College of Arts and Crafts. Since 1975, her interdisciplinary often interactive works have been extensively shown nationally and internationally,

Rob Terry is technical manager for the developers program at Silicon Graphics Computer Systems, CA. He has worked on a range of computer systems ... His expertise in the technical arena is further enhanced b a background in audio and video production. ...

 

                                                                              — CYBERWORLD  1997

THE SAN FRANCISCO BAY GUARDIAN

March 2, 1994, Vol. 28, No.22

"Critic's Choice: Art" by Harry Roche

'Color in the Shadows:  Bay Area Cyberart'

Photo is: Jo Ann Gillerman in AnArchy pARTyCam,

Live Cyber Performance and Cyber Fashion

JoAnn Gillerman

AnArchy pARTyCAM

Yerba Buena Gardens

Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, San Francisco, CA

1994

Future Sex

Issue Seven
 

EROS INterACTive: a real-time interactive kiosk

UI Interface Screen (Gillerman © 1993

Talk Dirty to Me

When artists JoAnn Gillerman and Rob Terry set out to create a patch-work of public opinion on erotica in the techno age, they figured the best way to get folks to open up was with a little seduction. THe result was EROS INterACTive, an electronic kiosk that solicits candid commentary through provocatively pictured help screens that whisper encouragements like "Come play with me: and "Touch me here". Created on the SIlicon Graphics Indy, EROS coaxes users to videotape their own musings about eroticism and interactivity, as well as peek at messages left by other participants. It's user-flirty approach works; when EROS was shown at the New Sensation Exhibiition in San Francisco last fall, over 250 people sounded off in just three days. "We thought this seemed like a good way to have a humanish interface" says Gillerman. Maybe it's easier telling your thoughts to a computer if it haappens to be a smooth talker.

WEIRD OTHER 1990's

ArtsWire: "A Conversation with JoAnn Gillerman"

Hosts: Judy Malloy & Anna Couey, New York Foundation for the Arts, NYFA

Interactive Art Conference on ArtsWire, OnLine

a very early virtual online conversation and residency  on artists exploring interactive art for public reach

Aug. 1996

Live/Published/Transcribed/Archived on * The Well at link below:

Complete Transcript

The Well: https://people.well.com/user/couey/interactive/gillerman.html | Context Reference: https://people.well.com/user/couey/interactive/guests.html

( * The Well: Started by Stewart Brand and Larry Brilliant in 1985, The Whole Earth 'Lectronic Link, The WELL, is one of the oldest continuously operating virtual communities. By 1993 it had 7,000 members, a staff of 12, and gross annual income of $2 million. A 1997 feature in Wired magazine called it "The world's most influential online community. It is best known for its Internet forums, (In 2012, when it was last publicly offered for sale, it had 2,693 members. - Wikepedia )

Conversations with Interactive Artists

The artists listed here joined the Interactive Art Conference for virtual residencies lasting one month. The conversations that emerged provide insights on the artists' work and approach to interactivity; and explore issues of art and audience, context, and purpose in interactive art. They are reproduced for the web with permission of all participants.

For information about republishing, please contact Anna Couey and Judy Malloyhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judy_Malloy

Malloy worked for Arts Wire, a program of the New York Foundation for the Arts (NYFA) from its early origins in 1993. She began serving as editor of the online periodical Arts Wire Current in March 1996. She continued as editor through the periodical's name change to NYFA Current in November, 2002, until March 2004.

Jo Ann Gillerman presents work to United States Information Service, Calcutta, India, Dec. 1995
"Time and Talent" Group at USIS American Center in Calcutta, India, Nov. 17, 1995

United States Information Service

Calcutta, India

December, 1995

Ms. Jo Ann Gillerman

"The audience found the description and examples of your work, "The Sun Drops its Torch", extremely interesting. It was their first exposure to an electronic art presentation. The use of computers in creating art is an area very new in India. Since the solar eclipse was a rare experience for many Calcuttans, your presentation generated a grater interest in the event.

I congratulate you on the skill and creativity that have gone into this presentation. I greatly appreciate your willingness to offer this program and share your experience with Calcuttans."

ELECTRO-HEALING

Collaborative  interdisciplinary interactive and virtual healing Environment

Tomorrow's Realities, Siggraph 1993 Anaheim, CA

JoAnn Gillerman Director and Professor

Diverse group of Collaborators: The Experimental Media Class at California College of Arts and Crafts, Oakland, CA

Theme: Universal concepts, multicultural wold view, political social ethical aesthetic concerns ranging from racism (Basic Black) to virtual spirituality (Kundalini & Baseball).

Computer Graphics | Visual Proceedings - a publication of ACM SIGGTRAPH. 1993 p.196

Electro-Healing by JoAnn Gillerman 1993
complete publication

Electro-Healing

by

JoAnn Gillerman

California College of Arts and Crafts

excerpts:

Electro-Healing is a collaborative interdisciplinary interactive and virtual healing environment. It deals with communication and new technologies. As a group, we decided to work with universal concepts that could accommodate a changing multi-cultural world view, as well as deal with political, social, ethical, and aesthetic concerns. The collaborators of the installation represent a diverse group of people of varied ages and ethnic backgrounds from at least four different countries and cultures from around the world. The text is multi-lingual.

...

Healing, our common ground, has been translated loosely and covers a broad spectrum of ideas. It has been personally interpreted by the individual contributors of each of the eight different individual segments comprising the entire interactive installation.

...

We wanted to get the interaction off of the computer keyboard or mouse, opting for a more natural interface of real space and movement through time.

..

To this end, the Experimental Media Class at the California College of Art and Crafts has designed and produced the Electro-Healing Installation— a virtual environment that we believe is cross-cultural, deals with some relevant political and social issues in a refreshing way, and is technologically unique and friendly for its participants.

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