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Thesis Info

LABS ID
00602
Thesis Title
Zen and the Art of Software Performance: John Cage and Lejaren A. Hiller Jr.’s HPSCHD (1967-1969)
Author
Tiffany Funk
2nd Author
3rd Author
Degree
PhD
Year
2016
Number of Pages
231
University
University of Illinois at Chicago
Thesis Supervisor
Hannah B Higgins
Supervisor e-mail
higgins AT uic.edu
Other Supervisor(s)
S. Elise Archias, Steve Everett, Angus Forbes, Jay Alan Yim
Language(s) of Thesis
English
Department / Discipline
Art History
Languages Familiar to Author
English, Spanish, Italian
URL where full thesis can be found
hdl.handle.net/10027/21522
Keywords
art, technology, computer art, performance art, conceptual art, digital art, john cage, lejaren hiller
Abstract: 200-500 words
This dissertation examines John Cage and Lejaren A. Hiller Jr.’s computer-assisted music event HPSCHD (1967-69), constituting a crucial moment in the history of software in artistic practice. Engaging both Cage’s interest in indeterminacy as well as Hiller’s creative application of information theory in composition, the two collaborators programmed an event juxtaposing the mechanical simplicity of the harpsichord with the complex capabilities of a supercomputer to investigate procedural and ontological notions of chance operations. This ambitious multi-media performance was composed of seven solo pieces for harpsichord derived from processed works by Mozart, Beethoven, Chopin, Schumann, Gottschalk, Busoni, Schoenberg, Cage, and Hiller, 52 microtonal, computer-generated magnetic tapes, and over 8,000 slides and 40 films.  Despite its ambitious computational concept, art historical discourse over-determines Cage’s involvement in the HPSCHD performance, focusing on its techno-utopian visuals rather than its programming achievements. In contrast, an exploration of Hiller’s methodology programming the “HPSCHD” software and its many subroutines demonstrates the underlying parallels between the dematerialization of both information and art; considering programming as a performance reveals how HPSCHD, as well as many influential early computer artworks, fits into the greater historical trend of dematerialization transforming both art and information in the latter half of the 20th century. Though its premiere received mixed reviews—the most negative chiefly due to the technological dysphoria heightened by the tumultuous socio-cultural climate of the late 1960s and early 70s—contemporary re-stagings of HPSCHD emphasize its participatory ethos and indeterminate form, encouraging radical, creative adaptations of both proprietary and open-source technologies for experimentation and performance.