roygbiv&b

7.75" x 11.5"
30 pages | Foil-stamped cover (540gsm)
Wire-O binding
First Edition
2019

published by Run/Off Editions
Printed & bound at Conveyor Arts
ISBN 9781644677599

roygbiv&b is Marina Rosenfeld’s first book publication, documenting her performance of the same name, and includes gate-fold renderings of the score pages, a “User’s Manual” by the artist, photos from the several performances of the work, and a foreword by musicologist Benjamin Piekut. 
The performance was Rosenfeld’s contribution to the exhibition Instructions Lab at the Museum of Modern Art (NY) in 2011.

A punning riff on spectral composition, the score from the work hinges on the misapprehension of the letters “r-o-y-g-b-” as song lyrics ( “are you that somebody…” “oh, oh, oh…” “why should my heart…” “just be…”). A choir is instructed to recall and re-perform in dense clusters of call-and-response, song fragments prompted by the familiar letters of the spectrum, which in the work’s premiere, were collected and projected vertically into the architectural volume of MoMA’s atrium in the implied form of a rainbow. “The drawings reproduced in this publication distill the playful translation of data across optical, auditory, and linguistic registers. As notations, they transcribe the MoMA performance, but they also enact a more general demonstration of human experience as transcription: light to color, letter, sound, word, lyric, and eventually music.” (B. Piekut)


Marina Rosenfeld
 is a NY-based composer and artist working across disciplines. She has had solo presentations of her music, installation and performance at institutions including the Park Avenue Armory, the Bard Center for Curatorial Studies, Portikus Frankfurt, the Kitchen, and the Artist’s Institute, and has created works for the Holland, Borealis, Wien Modern, Time:Spans, Donaueschingen and Ultima festivals, among many others. She has participated in the Whitney, Montreal and PERFORMA biennials, and surveys including Every Time A Ear Di Son for Documenta 14 and Tasmania’s Dark Mofo. During 2019 she was Inga Otto Maren Fellow of the Watermill Foundation, and in 2020 she will be Artist in Residence with Experiments in Art and Technology at Bell Labs Nokia. Rosenfeld teaches at Brooklyn College and at Bard College, where she is the co-chair of the MFA in Music/Sound.

Benjamin Piekut studied music and philosophy at Hampshire College before pursuing his M.A. in composition at Mills College, where he studied with Alvin Curran and Pauline Oliveros. After a stint in the critical studies/experimental practices program at the University of California, San Diego, he completed his Ph.D. in historical musicology at Columbia University. His book, Experimentalism Otherwise: The New York Avant-Garde and its Limits, was published in 2011 by the University of California Press. And just recently Henry Cow: The World Is A Problem, by Duke University Press.

Design by Marion Bizet & Nickolas Mohanna