VICTOR ACEVEDO was the guest speaker for
Robert Michael Smith's class called
Contemporary Art in
Context at the
NEW YORK INSTITUTE of TECHNOLOGY (
NYIT) on 8
April 2010.
The presentation was called PATTERN,
FIELD,
MATRIX, VISUAL
MUSIC. In this 47-minute clip edited down from his 1.5 hour presentation and
Q&A; session, Acevedo surveys his 35+ year career in the visual arts. Starting from his student phase in
1977 and early professional practice. He discusses some of his early influences (PIcasso,
M.C. Escher,
Salvador Dali, &
Buckminster Fuller) and the genesis of his signature space-frame & polyhedral graphical metaphor -- kind of 'geometrical
Surrealism.'
1977-84 working with traditional media (painting and drawing)
1983 to
2006 Computer Art:
Digital Prints
(see: 23.29 video timeline)
2007 to present:
Motion Graphics:
Visual Music
(see 40.48 video timeline)
Acevedo is an artist and desktop computer art pioneer, best known for his digital work involving printmaking, imaging and video. He attended
Art Center College of Design in
Pasadena (1979-81). He lived in
New York City from
1995 to 2009 where he taught at the
School of Visual Arts,
MFA Computer Art program. He is now based in
Los Angeles, California.
Acevedo brings to his current roles as music video director / video editor, motion graphics artist and
LIVE visualist (VJ) over 35 years of experience in the visual arts.
Following a natural evolution, his work has moved from traditional media to digital and later from still-imagery to motion graphics. Considering the implications of
Synesthesia and given his avid interest in contemporary
Electronic Beat music as well as Digital
Cinema and Synergetic
Geometry, Acevedo has positioned himself inside the genre called VISUAL MUSIC. His music video productions are informed by a synthesis of these traditions, disciplines, phenomenologies.
Acevedo's interest in Electronic Beat music, began with his introduction to
Drum and Bass in
NYC early 1995.
Returning to
Los Angeles in 2009 he soon immersed himself into the local electronic underground. As a result, his most recent visual music works have integrated dance forms like
Drum n Bass and Dubstep as spun at club nights such as
RESPECT and
SMOG as well as the more experimental forms of abstract, hip-hop/dubstep,
BASS heavy music that can be found at the community's epicenter,
LOW END THEORY.
Acevedo's digital fine art work has been featured in several books including: "
Moving Innovation:
A History of
Computer Animation". (
Tom Sito,
MIT Press 2013) "
Digital Art" (
Wolf Lieser, Ullman /
Tandem 2009) ; "From Technological to
Virtual Art" (
Frank Popper, MIT Press 2007) ; "Art of the
Digital Age" (
Bruce Wands,
Thames and Hudson, 2006) ; "Escher's
Legacy: A
Centennial Celebration," (edited by
Doris Schattschneider and
Michelle Emmer,
Springer Verlag 2002.)
Acevedo has shown his work in over 85 exhibitions worldwide including The
Waterman Gallery at
RISD, 2007 &
2011; SYNAPSE at
Los Angeles Center for Digital Art (LACDA)
July 2005, The
Isamu Noguchi Museum: Synergetics in the Arts
2005; The
Siggraph/
TAS,
Paris, 2005;
Novosibirsk State Art Museum; 2005; Digital Art Museum,
Berlin 2004;
Millennium Art Museum,
Bejing, China, 2004;
ACM/Siggraph CG03; Siggraph/TAS,
Cleveland Art Museum
2003; Digital
Duality at
EZTV/
Cyberspace 2002; Levall Gallery,
Novosibirsk, Russia, 2002; YLEM's
20th Anniversary Exhibition, SF,
California,
2001;
Colville Place Gallery,
London, 2001; in ArcadeIII, touring the UK 2001- 02, Galerie der Gegenwart, Weisbaden,
Germany, 2001;
ACM/SIGGRAPH '98,
Orlando FL.; M.C. Escher
Centennial Congress,
Rome, Italy 1998; NY Digital
Salon 1996 &
1994; LA Digilantes at
Museum of Art Downtown Los Angeles,
1997; Digital
Site: LA & NYC 1995;
Golden Plotter, Gladbeck, Germany 1994;
ISEA,
Minneapolis, MN 1993; Digital Salon Des
Independents Cyberspace Gallery at EZTV 1993;
Prix Ars Electronica,
Linz, Austria 1991.
- published: 03 Sep 2013
- views: 358