THIS EVENT HAS ENDED
Tue February 20, 2018

Visiting Artists and Scholars Lecture: Guillermo Galindo

SEE EVENT DETAILS
Visiting Artists and Scholars lecture
Guillermo Galindo is an experimental composer, sonic architect, performance artist and visual media artist, and Jungian Tarotist. The extent of his work redefines the conventional limits between music, the art of music composition, and the intersections between all art disciplines, politics, humanitarian issues, spirituality, and social awareness.

Galindo’s artistic practice emerges from the crossroads between sound, sight and performance and includes everything from orchestral compositions, instrumental works and opera, to sculpture, visual arts, computer interaction, electro-acoustic music, film making, instrument building, three-dimensional installation and live improvisation. His acoustic compositions include major chamber and solo works, two symphonies commissioned by the UNAM (National Autonomous University of Mexico) symphony orchestra, the Oakland symphony orchestra and choir, and two operas with libretto by Guillermo Gomez Peña and Anne Carson. His interactive string quartet Remote Control, commissioned by the Kronos Quartet for the Fifty for the Future series, will be premiered at the San Francisco Jazz Festival in April 2018.

In 2017, Galindo created his series Echo Exodus for documenta14. This group of works has been shown both in Athens, Greece and in Kassel, Germany. For Echo Exodus, Galindo continues building sonic devices and graphic scores, this time from belongings of European refugees. Fluchtzieleuropaschiffbruchschallkörper, an enormous iconic piece made from two wreckage immigrant boats found in the island of Lesbos, is controversially shown at documenta hall in 2017. Border Cantos, an award winning book published by Aperture Foundation and a traveling exhibit featuring a unique collaboration between Galindo and award-winning American photographer Richard Misrach featuring Galindo’s sonic devices and musical scores made from detritus left behind by immigrants, has been shown at the San Jose Museum of Art (2016), Amon Carter Museum, Texas (2016), Crystal Bridges Museum, Arkansas (2017), and Pace Gallery, New York (2017).

Galindo’s graphic scores and three-dimensional sculptural cyber-totemic sonic objects have been shown at major museums and art biennials in America, Europe, Asia, and around the world, including documenta14 (2017), Pacific Standard Time (2017), and CTM Festival, Berlin (2017), FIAC Art Fair, Paris (2017), Rusk Festival, Finland (2017), and Miami Art Basel (2017). His work has been featured on: BBC Outlook (London), NPR City Arts and Lectures, Vice Magazine (London), RTS Switzerland, CBC (Canada), California Sunday Magazine (US), Reforma Newspaper (Mexico), CNN, and the New York Times, among many others. Galindo’s recent solo exhibit Sonic Botany, created on the occasion of Pacific Standard Time and shown at the Huntington Library, comments on European colonial codexes, integrating genomes of plants and insects into a sight and sound environment. Galindo will be a Mohr Visiting Artist at Stanford University during the Spring 2018.

About VAS
The Visiting Artists and Scholars Lecture Series (VAS) provides a public forum for engagement and dialogue with major figures in international contemporary art and culture. Through lectures, screenings, and performances, the series creates intimate connections between SFAI, artists, and the public.
Free and open to all.

DATE AND TIME
Tue, February 20, 2018
7:00 PM – 8:30 PM PST

LOCATION
Osher Lecture Hall
800 Chestnut Street
San Francisco, CA 94133
Visiting Artists and Scholars lecture
Guillermo Galindo is an experimental composer, sonic architect, performance artist and visual media artist, and Jungian Tarotist. The extent of his work redefines the conventional limits between music, the art of music composition, and the intersections between all art disciplines, politics, humanitarian issues, spirituality, and social awareness.

Galindo’s artistic practice emerges from the crossroads between sound, sight and performance and includes everything from orchestral compositions, instrumental works and opera, to sculpture, visual arts, computer interaction, electro-acoustic music, film making, instrument building, three-dimensional installation and live improvisation. His acoustic compositions include major chamber and solo works, two symphonies commissioned by the UNAM (National Autonomous University of Mexico) symphony orchestra, the Oakland symphony orchestra and choir, and two operas with libretto by Guillermo Gomez Peña and Anne Carson. His interactive string quartet Remote Control, commissioned by the Kronos Quartet for the Fifty for the Future series, will be premiered at the San Francisco Jazz Festival in April 2018.

In 2017, Galindo created his series Echo Exodus for documenta14. This group of works has been shown both in Athens, Greece and in Kassel, Germany. For Echo Exodus, Galindo continues building sonic devices and graphic scores, this time from belongings of European refugees. Fluchtzieleuropaschiffbruchschallkörper, an enormous iconic piece made from two wreckage immigrant boats found in the island of Lesbos, is controversially shown at documenta hall in 2017. Border Cantos, an award winning book published by Aperture Foundation and a traveling exhibit featuring a unique collaboration between Galindo and award-winning American photographer Richard Misrach featuring Galindo’s sonic devices and musical scores made from detritus left behind by immigrants, has been shown at the San Jose Museum of Art (2016), Amon Carter Museum, Texas (2016), Crystal Bridges Museum, Arkansas (2017), and Pace Gallery, New York (2017).

Galindo’s graphic scores and three-dimensional sculptural cyber-totemic sonic objects have been shown at major museums and art biennials in America, Europe, Asia, and around the world, including documenta14 (2017), Pacific Standard Time (2017), and CTM Festival, Berlin (2017), FIAC Art Fair, Paris (2017), Rusk Festival, Finland (2017), and Miami Art Basel (2017). His work has been featured on: BBC Outlook (London), NPR City Arts and Lectures, Vice Magazine (London), RTS Switzerland, CBC (Canada), California Sunday Magazine (US), Reforma Newspaper (Mexico), CNN, and the New York Times, among many others. Galindo’s recent solo exhibit Sonic Botany, created on the occasion of Pacific Standard Time and shown at the Huntington Library, comments on European colonial codexes, integrating genomes of plants and insects into a sight and sound environment. Galindo will be a Mohr Visiting Artist at Stanford University during the Spring 2018.

About VAS
The Visiting Artists and Scholars Lecture Series (VAS) provides a public forum for engagement and dialogue with major figures in international contemporary art and culture. Through lectures, screenings, and performances, the series creates intimate connections between SFAI, artists, and the public.
Free and open to all.

DATE AND TIME
Tue, February 20, 2018
7:00 PM – 8:30 PM PST

LOCATION
Osher Lecture Hall
800 Chestnut Street
San Francisco, CA 94133
read more
show less
   
EDIT OWNER
Owned by
{{eventOwner.email_address || eventOwner.displayName}}
New Owner

Update

EDIT EDIT
Links:
Event Details

Category:
Art

Date/Times:
800 Chestnut Street, San Francisco, CA 94133

SAN FRANCISCO BAY AREA EVENTS CALENDAR

TODAY
27
SATURDAY
28
SUNDAY
29
MONDAY
1
The Best Events
Every Week in Your Inbox

Thank you for subscribing!

Edit Event Details

I am the event organizer



Your suggestion is required.



Your email is required.
Not valid email!

    Cancel
Great suggestion! We'll be in touch.
Event reviewed successfully.

Success!

Your event is now LIVE on SF STATION

COPY LINK TO SHARE Copied

or share on


See my event listing


Looking for more visibility? Reach more people with our marketing services