Helen Thorington
Helen Louise Thorington is an American sound artist and writer. She is also the founder of New Radio and Performing Arts, a nonprofit organization based in New York City; the founder and executive producer of New American Radio ; and the founder and co-director of Turbulence.org. Thorington began composing in 1977; her first works were aired on National Public Radio on such programs as Options, Voices in the Wind, and All Things Considered. In 1978, she began composing music for dance, collaborating with Bill T. Jones, Arnie Zane, and Lois Welk. She has performed nationally, including at Kennedy Center, Jacob's Pillow, Dance Theatre Workshop, and The Kitchen. Thorington began creating Internet art in the mid-1990s, co-producing several multimedia, hypertext narratives and networked performances that culminated in an installation of the seminal work, Adrift, at The New Museum in 2001.
Early life and education
Helen Thorington grew up in Wynnewood, Pennsylvania. She is the daughter of Richard Wainwright and Katherine Louise Thorington, and sister of Richard Wainwright Thorington, Jr. She is a graduate of The Baldwin School, Bryn Mawr, PA and Wellesley College. After graduating with a BA in Biblical History, and attending Union Theological Seminary, New York, Thorington discovered her passion for English literature. She studied English Literature at the University of Minnesota ; pursued Special Studies in the English Comic Novel with John Bayley, New College, Oxford University, England ; and completed coursework for a PhD in English Literature at Rutgers University. She compiled the index for Growth and Culture: A Photographic Study of Balinese Childhood by Margaret Mead, and worked as a copy editor at G. P. Putnam's Sons.Career
Writing
Thorington has written and published experimental fiction and art criticism. The Story, which aired on Public Radio in 1979, was published in Chelsea 36 and Chelsea 38. Written in 1977, The Author's Story was published in Lost Areas by Oil Books, Sugar Run, Pennsylvania. The Longest Story: A Work in Progress for Adding Machine Tape was published in Sixth Assembling/A Collection of Otherwise Unpublishable Manuscripts, compiled by Henry Korn, Richard Kostelanetz and Mike Metz.Rip on/off published a collection of Thorington’s texts, Il est si difficile de trouver le commencement, in 2017. Thorington co-authored with Jacki Apple the limited edition artist's book, The Tower in 2015; published in Contemporary Music Review; and was commissioned by Tate Modern, London to write Radio, Art, Life: New Contexts. Her essays have been published in several books, including First Person: New Media as Story, Performance, and Game and Unsitely Aesthetics - Uncertain Practices In Contemporary Art.''
Sound Art
Radio
Thorington found her way to sound through her writing. After publishing Adventures at Frog Hollow in 1973, she was invited to produce a musical version for Towanda Performing Arts, Towanda, PA. Having no musical experience, she learned how to use an EML 101 Synthesizer and began creating her own compositions. Later, she began doing her own Field recordings − bats, oil pumps, trains, parrots, frogs − which she mixed with her synthetic sounds, her own and others' voices, and solo improvisations by musicians such as violinist Aurora Manuel ; cellist Deidre Murray ; and accordionist Guy Klucsevek.Thorington describes her approach to sound this way: "My focus... has been on radiophonic space. One of the things that distinguishes the electronic media is the ability to separate sound from its source, to remove environmental sound from its location, vocal sound from a person; to be able to cut, manipulate, and alter it in the creation of another kind of work. I liken this to the science of gene manipulation. We've reduced — or, I as a practicing radio artist, reduce — sound to sound data. I am not concerned that it's music, that it's an environment, that it's voice."
In 1979, independent public radio producer Larry Josephson invited Thorington to the Airlie Seminar on the Art of Radio in Quantico, VA, where she premiered Dream Sequence. National Public Radio purchased it, and it was among the first radio art works broadcast nationally. Thorington was also commissioned by RAI, RNE and ORF. Her collaborators included Suzan-Lori Parks, Regine Beyer, Shelley Hirsch, Pamela Z, Agnieszka Waligorska and Sarah Montague.
Thorington spoke at international Radio art conferences and served as the Radio Editor for EAR Magazine from 1987 to 1989. Her documentaries, dramas, and sound compositions have been aired on radio, internationally, for the past thirty-five years.
Partial List of Works
- Calling to Mind
- Liberty and Ellis-Fresh Perspectives
- Fleeting Encounters
- Parker's MUD Journal
- North Country
- Story Space
- The Hunt Is On: Reflections on the Human Genome Project
- Going Between
- In the Devil's Footsteps
- Dracula's Wives
- Loco-motive
- Recipe for a Lark
- Creative Tracks: Native American Artists in the '90s
- Partial Perceptions
- Terra dell'Immaginazione
- Aphids and Others
- In the Dark
- Congruent Appeal
- One to Win
- Straight Ahead
- Fiddling Around
- Hard City Rock: New York City in Sound
- Natural Classic
- Building a Universe, Part 2: Rifts, Absences and Omissions
- Parrot Talk
- Building a Universe, Part 1
- The American Buffalo
- The Dream Sequence, Part 1 & 2
Dance
Live Performance
Thorington performed her compositions live at numerous venues in New York City, including Dance Theatre Workshop, Experimental Intermedia Foundation, and Roulette. In 1981, an evening was dedicated to three of her works – A Quiet Place, A Short History of Hats, and Good Morning, Good Evening, Where Are You? Conversation #1 – using tape recorder, and acoustic and electronic instruments. Helen Thorington: An Evening of Music at the EIF in 1983 included "a new piece for violin and oil pump; and another for cello and rubbed glass."In 1997, Thorington co-curated the performance series Performing Bodies and Smart Machines at the Whitney Museum of American Art at Philip Morris with Toni Dove and Jeanette Vuocolo.
Video
Thorington composed sound scores for Barbara Hammer's Optic Nerve, which premiered at the Berlin Film Festival and the Whitney Biennial, and Endangered, which was shown at the 1989 Whitney Biennial.Awards and Commissions
- Deep Wireless Commission
- Honourable Recognition, PRIX BOHEMIA RADIO FESTIVAL, Czechoslovakia
- Winner, AETHER FESTIVAL, KUNM-FM, Albuquerque, New Mexico
- New York Foundation on the Arts Creative Fellowship Award: Emerging Forms for Digital Art
- Creative Capital Grant for Adrift
- Creative Capital Grant for Adrift
- New York State Council on the Arts, Music Commission
- Meet the Composer Commissioning Program Award
- Artist in Residence, Harvestworks, Studio Pass, New York City
- Meet the Composer Commissioning Program Award
- New York State Council on the Arts, Individual Artists Award, Media
- Paul Robeson Fund, Radio Grant
- Paul Robeson Fund, Radio Grant
- National Endowment for the Arts, Media Arts Award
- New York State Council on the Arts, Individual Artists Award, Music Commission
- Electronic Arts Grants Program of the Experimental Television Center
- First Prize, MACROPHON, the First International Festival of Radio Art, Poland
- National Endowment for the Arts, Media Arts Award
- New York State Council on the Arts, Individual Artists Award, Media
- National Endowment for the Arts, Media Arts Award
Not-for-Profit
Networked Art
Net Art: Thorington created several works for the Internet, among them Solitaire, an interactive narrative experiment that invited users to co-author the piece; North Country, Parts 1 and 2, a hypertext, nonlinear narrative that can be experienced with or without audio accompaniment; and the multi-location, networked performance, Adrift, a cinematic journey across a harbor that included real-time webcam footage, text, 3D graphics, and soundscape. With collaborators Jesse Gilbert and Marek Walczak, Adrift was presented at Ars Electronica, Linz, Austria ; the tenth anniversary celebration of Kunstradio, Vienna; and the New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York City in 2002, as well as multiple times online. Adrift was supported by a Creative Capital grant.Networked Performance: After participating in PORT: Navigating Digital Culture, Thorington, with Jesse Gilbert, produced and performed in multiple networked, musical performances on the web beginning in 1998. Their collaborators included Harvestworks, the Pauline Oliveros Foundation, and Mills College. Thorington co-founded Networked_Performance and Networked_Music_Review, two research blogs that chronicled network-enabled practice. Thorington has lectured internationally, including at the conference Media in Transition 5: Creativity, Ownership and Collaboration in the Digital Age, Massachusetts Institute for Technology ; Digital Arts Weeks, Zurich ; and the conference Sounding Cultures, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY.