Laurie Anderson

(Redirected from Laurie anderson)

Laura Phillips "Laurie" Anderson (born June 5, 1947) is an American avant-garde artist,[2][3] musician and filmmaker whose work spans performance art, pop music, and multimedia projects.[3] Initially trained in violin and sculpting,[4] Anderson pursued a variety of performance art projects in New York City during the 1970s, focusing particularly on language, technology, and visual imagery.[2] She achieved unexpected commercial success when her song "O Superman" reached number two on the UK singles chart in 1981.

Laurie Anderson
Anderson in 2020
Anderson in 2020
Background information
Birth nameLaura Phillips Anderson
Born (1947-06-05) June 5, 1947 (age 77)
Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
Genres
Occupations
  • Musician
  • composer
  • performance artist
  • electronic literature writer
Instruments
  • Violin
  • keyboards
  • percussion
  • vocals
Years active1969–present
LabelsWarner Bros., Nonesuch/Elektra
Spouse
(m. 2008; died 2013)
Websitelaurieanderson.com

Anderson's debut album Big Science was released in 1982 and has since been followed by a number of studio and live albums. She starred in and directed the 1986 concert film Home of the Brave.[5] Anderson's creative output has also included theatrical and documentary works, voice acting, art installations, and a CD-ROM. She is a pioneer in electronic music and has invented several musical devices that she has used in her recordings and performance art shows.[6]

Early life and education

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Laura Phillips Anderson was born in Chicago on June 5, 1947, and grew up in the nearby suburb of Glen Ellyn, Illinois, one of eight children born to Mary Louise (née Rowland) and Arthur T. Anderson.[7][8] Growing up, she spent weekends studying painting at the Art Institute of Chicago and played with the Chicago Youth Symphony.[9]

She graduated from Glenbard West High School. She attended Mills College in California, and after moving to New York in 1966,[9] graduated in 1969 from Barnard College with a B.A. magna cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa, studying art history. In 1972, she obtained an M.F.A. in sculpture from Columbia University.[10]

Her first performance-art piece — a symphony played on automobile horns — was performed in 1969. In 1970, she drew the underground comix Baloney Moccasins, which was published by George DiCaprio. In the early 1970s, she worked as an art instructor, as an art critic for magazines such as Artforum,[11] and illustrated children's books[12]—the first of which was titled The Package, a mystery story in pictures alone.[13]

Career

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1970s

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Photograph of Anderson in the Library of Congress

Anderson performed in New York during the 1970s. One of her most-cited performances, Duets on Ice, which she conducted in New York and other cities around the world, involved her playing the violin along with a recording while wearing ice skates with the blades frozen into a block of ice; the performance ended only when the ice had melted away. Two early pieces, "New York Social Life" and "Time to Go", are included in the 1977 compilation New Music for Electronic and Recorded Media, along with works by Pauline Oliveros and others.[4] Two other pieces were included on Airwaves, a collection of audio pieces by various artists. She also recorded a lecture for Vision, a set of artist's lectures released by Crown Point Press as a set of six LPs.

Many of Anderson's earliest recordings remain unreleased or were issued only in limited quantities, such as her first single, "It's Not the Bullet that Kills You (It's the Hole)". That song, along with "New York Social Life" and about a dozen others, was originally recorded for use in an art installation that consisted of a jukebox that played the different Anderson compositions, at the Holly Solomon Gallery in New York City. Among the musicians on these early recordings are Peter Gordon on saxophone, Scott Johnson on guitar, Ken Deifik on harmonica, and Joe Kos on drums. Photographs and descriptions of many of these early performances were included in Anderson's retrospective book Stories from the Nerve Bible.[14]

During the late 1970s, Anderson made a number of additional recordings that were either released privately or included on compilations of avant-garde music, most notably releases by the Giorno Poetry Systems label run by New York poet John Giorno, an early intimate of Andy Warhol.[15] In 1978, she performed at the Nova Convention, a major conference involving many counter-culture figures and rising avant-garde musical stars, including William S. Burroughs, Philip Glass, Frank Zappa, Timothy Leary, Malcolm Goldstein, John Cage, and Allen Ginsberg.[16] She also worked with comedian Andy Kaufman in the late 1970s.[17]

1980s

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In 1980, Anderson was awarded an honorary doctorate from the San Francisco Art Institute. In 1982, she was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship for Creative Arts—Film.[10] In 1987, Anderson was awarded an honorary doctorate in the fine arts from the University of the Arts in Philadelphia.[18]

Anderson became widely known outside the art world in 1981 with the single "O Superman", originally released in a limited quantity by B. George's One Ten Records, which ultimately reached number two on the British charts.[19] The sudden influx of orders from the UK (prompted partly by British station BBC Radio 1 playlisting the record) led to Anderson signing a seven-album deal with Warner Bros. Records, which re-released the single.[20]

"O Superman" was part of a larger stage work titled United States and was included on the album Big Science.[21] Prior to the release of Big Science, Anderson returned to Giorno Poetry Systems to record the album You're the Guy I Want to Share My Money With; Anderson recorded one side of the double-LP set, with William S. Burroughs and John Giorno recording a side each, and the fourth side featured a separate groove for each artist. This was followed by the back-to-back releases of her albums Mister Heartbreak and United States Live, the latter of which was a five-LP (and, later, four-CD) recording of her two-evening stage show at the Brooklyn Academy of Music.[22] She also appeared in a television special produced by Nam June Paik broadcast on New Year's Day 1984, titled "Good Morning, Mr. Orwell".[23]

 
Anderson at De Vereeniging in Nijmegen, 1986

She next starred in and directed the 1986 concert film Home of the Brave and also composed the soundtracks for the Spalding Gray films Swimming to Cambodia and Monster in a Box. During this time, she also contributed music to Robert Wilson's Alcestis at the American Repertory Theater in Cambridge, Massachusetts. She also hosted the PBS series Alive from Off Center during 1987, after having produced the short film What You Mean We? for the series the year before. What You Mean We? introduced a new character played by Anderson: "The Clone", a digitally altered masculine counterpart to Anderson who later "co-hosted" with her when she did her presenting stint on Alive from Off Center. Elements of The Clone were later incorporated into the titular "puppet" of her later work, Puppet Motel. In that year, she also appeared on Peter Gabriel's album So, co-writing and performing on the song "This is the Picture (Excellent Birds)". (A version of “Excellent Birds” was also released on Mister Heartbreak.)

Release of Anderson's first post-Home of the Brave album, 1989's Strange Angels, was delayed for more than a year in order for Anderson to take singing lessons. This was due to the album being more musically inclined (in terms of singing) than her previous works.[24] The single "Babydoll" was a moderate hit on the Modern Rock Charts in 1989.

1990s

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In 1991, she was a member of the jury at the 41st Berlin International Film Festival.[25] In the same year, Anderson appeared in The Human Face, a feature arts documentary directed by artist-filmmakers Nichola Bruce and Michael Coulson for BBC television. Anderson was the presenter in this documentary on the history of the face in art and science. Her face was transformed using latex masks and digital special effects as she introduced ideas about the relationship between physiognomy and perception. Her varied career in the early 1990s included voice-acting in the animated film The Rugrats Movie. In 1994, she created a CD-ROM titled Puppet Motel, which was followed by Bright Red, co-produced by Brian Eno, and another spoken-word album, The Ugly One with the Jewels. This was followed by an appearance on the 1997 charity single "Perfect Day".[26]

In 1996, Anderson performed with Diego Frenkel (La Portuária) and Aterciopelados for the AIDS benefit album Silencio=Muerte: Red Hot + Latin produced by the Red Hot Organization.

An interval of more than half a decade followed before her next album release. During this time, she wrote a supplemental article on the cultural character of New York City for the Encyclopædia Britannica[27] and created multimedia presentations, including one inspired by Moby-Dick (Songs and Stories from Moby Dick, 1999–2000).[28] One of the central themes in Anderson's work is exploring the effects of technology on human relationships and communication.

Starting in the 1990s, Anderson and Lou Reed, whom she had met in 1992, collaborated on recordings together.[29] Reed contributed to the tracks "In Our Sleep" from Anderson's Bright Red, "One Beautiful Evening" from Anderson's Life on a String, and "My Right Eye" and "Only an Expert" from Anderson's Homeland, which Reed also co-produced. Anderson contributed to the tracks "Call on Me" from Reed's collaborative project The Raven, "Rouge" and "Rock Minuet" from Reed's Ecstasy, and "Hang On to Your Emotions" from Reed's Set the Twilight Reeling.

In late 1998, Artist Space, New York presented an exhibit of Anderson’s work from 1970s to 1980s, along with her 1990s work, Whirlwind.[30]

2000s

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Anderson at a 2007 benefit concert

Life on a String appeared in 2001, by which time she signed a new contract with another Warner Music label, Nonesuch Records. Life on a String was a mixture of new works (including one song recalling the death of her father) and works from the Moby Dick presentation.[31] In 2001, she recorded the audiobook version of Don DeLillo's novel The Body Artist. Anderson went on tour performing a selection of her best-known musical pieces in 2001. One of these performances was recorded in New York City a week after the September 11, 2001 attacks, and included a performance of "O Superman". This concert was released in early 2002 as the double CD Live in New York.[32]

In 2003, Anderson produced albums with French musicians La Jarry and Hector Zazou and also performed with them. Zazou's album Strong Currents (2003), which brought together well-known soloists, features her alongside Melanie Gabriel, Irene Grandi and Jane Birkin, among others. She became NASA's first artist-in-residence in the same year, which inspired her performance piece The End of the Moon.[33][34] In May 2004, she received an honarary doctorate from Columbia University.[35] She was part of the team that created the opening ceremony for the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens and collaborated with choreographer Trisha Brown and filmmaker Agnieszka Wojtowicz-Vosloo on the multimedia project O Zlozony/O Composite for the Paris Opera Ballet which premiered at the Opera Garnier in Paris in December 2004. She mounted a succession of themed shows and composed a piece for Expo 2005 in Japan. In 2005, Anderson visited Russia's space program—the Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Centre and mission control—with The Arts Catalyst and took part in The Arts Catalyst's Space Soon event at the Roundhouse to reflect on her experiences.

 
Anderson performing Homeland in 2007

In 2005, her exhibition The Waters Reglitterized opened at the Sean Kelly Gallery in New York City. According to the press release by Sean Kelly,[36] the work is a diary of dreams and their literal recreation as works of art. This work uses the language of dreams to investigate the dream itself. The resulting pieces include drawings, prints, and high-definition video. The installation ran until October 22, 2005.

In 2006, Anderson was awarded a Residency at the American Academy in Rome. She narrated Ric Burns' Andy Warhol: A Documentary Film, which was first televised in September 2006 as part of the PBS American Masters series. She contributed a song to Plague Songs, a collection of songs related to the 10 Biblical plagues. Anderson also performed in Came So Far for Beauty, the Leonard Cohen tribute event held in the Point Theatre, Dublin, Ireland, on October 4–5, 2006. In November 2006, she published a book of drawings based on her dreams, titled Night Life.

Material from Homeland was performed at small work-in-progress shows in New York throughout May 2007 supported by a four-piece band with lighting and video visuals mixed live by Willie Williams and Mark Coniglio, respectively. A European tour of the Homeland work in progress included performances on September 28–29, 2007, at the Olympia Theatre, Dublin; on October 17–19 at the Melbourne International Arts Festival; and in Russia at the Moscow Dom Muzyky concert hall on April 26, 2008. The work was performed in Toronto, Canada, on June 14, 2008, with husband Lou Reed, making the "Lost Art of Conversation" a duet with vocals and guitar. Anderson's Homeland Tour performed at several locations across the United States as well, such as at the Ferst Center for the Arts, Atlanta, Georgia; The Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, New York City; and Harris Theater for Music and Dance in Millennium Park, Chicago, Illinois, co-presented by the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago.[37]

2010s

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In 2015 with Kronos Quartet, after performing Landfall in Chicago's Harris Theater

In February 2010, Anderson premiered a new theatrical work, titled Delusion, at the Vancouver 2010 Olympic Games. This piece was commissioned by the Vancouver 2010 Cultural Olympiad and the Barbican Centre, London.[38] Anderson was honored with the Women's Project Theater Woman of Achievement Award in March 2010. In May/June 2010, Anderson curated the Vivid Live festival in Sydney, together with Lou Reed.[39] Her new album Homeland was released on June 22. She performed "Only an Expert" on July 15, 2010, on the Late Show with David Letterman, and her song "Gravity's Angel" was featured on the Fox TV show So You Think You Can Dance the same day. She appears as a guest musician on several tracks from experimental jazz musician Colin Stetson's 2011 album New History Warfare Vol. 2: Judges.

Anderson developed a theatrical work titled "Another Day in America". The first public showings of this work-in-progress took place in Calgary, Alberta, in January 2012 as part of Theatre Junction Grand's 2011–12 season and One Yellow Rabbit's annual arts festival, the High Performance Rodeo.[40] Anderson was named the Inaugural Distinguished Artist-In-Residence at the Experimental Media and Performing Arts Center (EMPAC) at the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, New York, in May 2012.[41] In March 2013, an exhibition of Anderson's work entitled Laurie Anderson: Language of the Future, selected works 1971-2013 at the Samstag Museum was part of the Adelaide Festival of the Arts in Adelaide, South Australia. Anderson performed her Duets on Ice outside the Samstag on opening night.[42]

Anderson received the Honorary Doctor of Arts from the Aalto University School of Arts, Design and Architecture in 2013.[43] In June/July 2013, Anderson performed "The Language of the Future" and guest curated at the River to River Festival in New York City.[44] In November 2013, she was the featured Guest of Honor at the B3 Biennale of the Moving Image in Frankfurt, Germany.[45] In 2018, Anderson contributed vocals to a re-recording of the David Bowie song "Shining Star (Makin' My Love)", originally from Bowie's 1987 album Never Let Me Down. She was asked to join the production by producer Mario J. McNulty, who knew that Anderson and Bowie had been friends.[46]

On February 10, 2019, at the 61st Annual Grammy Awards, held in Los Angeles, Anderson and Kronos Quartet's Landfall won the Grammy Award for Best Chamber Music/Small Ensemble Performance. It was Anderson's first collaboration with Kronos Quartet and her first Grammy award, and was the second Grammy for Kronos. Inspired by her experience of Hurricane Sandy, Nonesuch Records said, "Landfall juxtaposes lush electronics and traditional strings by Kronos with Anderson's powerful descriptions of loss, from water-logged pianos to disappearing animal species to Dutch karaoke bars."[47]

 
Anderson playing outside at a Times Square performance in 2016

Chalkroom is a virtual reality work by Anderson and Taiwanese artist Hsin-Chien Huang in which the reader flies through an enormous structure made of words, drawings, and stories.[48] To the Moon, a collaboration with Hsin-Chien Huang, premiered at the Manchester International Festival on July 12, 2019. A 15-minute virtual reality artwork, To the Moon allows audience members to explore a moon that features donkey rides and rubbish from Earth in a non-narrative structure.[49] Alongside, a film shows the development of the new work.[50]

2020s

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Anderson performing with Doug Wieselman at the Hirshhorn Museum in 2023

Anderson was appointed the 2021 Charles Eliot Norton Professor of Poetry at Harvard University and presented a series of six lectures titled Spending the War Without You: Virtual Backgrounds over two semesters.[51]

In 2021, Anderson created a show on the second floor of the Hirshhorn Museum in Washington, D.C., titled "The Weather" and described by The New York Times as "a sort of nonretrospective retrospective of one of America's major, and majorly confounding, modern artists".[9]

In mid-2023, Laurie Anderson created "Looking into a Mirror Sideways", an exhibit that highlights various different styles of her art techniques.[52] It opened at the Moderna Museet in Stockholm, Sweden. Since opening, this artwork has been Anderson’s biggest solo show in Europe.[citation needed]

While in Europe, Anderson teamed up with Sexmob, a New York jazz band. Sexmob and Anderson toured Europe where they performed multiple versions of her songs, but adding a twist to them all. This tour was seen as "an attempt at defying gravity, resisting the pull, [and] reverting the downward fall".[53]

In 2024, Anderson withdrew from a guest professorship at the Folkwang University of the Arts in Essen, after university officials objected to her support of a "Letter Against Apartheid" organised by Palestinian artists, calling for "an immediate and unconditional cessation of Israeli violence against Palestinians".[54]

Inventions

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Anderson has invented several experimental musical instruments that she has used in her recordings and performances. In 1977, she created a tape-bow violin that uses recorded magnetic tape on the bow instead of horsehair and a magnetic tape head in the bridge.[55] In the late 1990s, she collaborated with Interval Research to develop an instrument she called a "talking stick", a six-foot-long (1.8 m) baton-like MIDI controller that can access and replicate sounds.[56]

Tape-bow violin

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The tape-bow violin is an instrument created by Laurie Anderson in 1977. It uses recorded magnetic tape in place of the traditional horsehair in the bow, and a magnetic tape head in the bridge. Anderson has updated and modified this device over the years. She can be seen using a later generation of this device in her film Home of the Brave during the Late Show segment in which she manipulates a sentence recorded by William S. Burroughs. This version of the violin used MIDI-based audio samples, triggered by contact with the bow.

Talking stick

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The talking stick is a six-foot-long baton-like MIDI controller. It was used in the Moby-Dick tour in 1999–2000. She described it in program notes as follows:[56]

The Talking Stick is a new instrument that I designed in collaboration with a team from Interval Research and Bob Bielecki. It is a wireless instrument that can access and replicate any sound. It works on the principle of granular synthesis. This is the technique of breaking sound into tiny segments, called grains, and then playing them back in different ways. The computer rearranges the sound fragments into continuous strings or random clusters that are played back in overlapping sequences to create new textures. The grains are very short, a few hundredths of a second. Granular synthesis can sound smooth or choppy depending on the size of the grain and the rate at which they're played. The grains are like film frames. If you slow them down enough, you begin to hear them separately.

Voice filters

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A recurring motif in Anderson's work is the use of an electric pitch-shifting voice filter that deepens her voice into a masculine register, a technique that Anderson has referred to as "audio drag".[57] Anderson has long used the resulting character in her work as a "voice of authority" or conscience,[57] although she later decided that the voice had lost much of its authority and instead began using the voice to provide historical or sociopolitical commentary,[58] as it is used on "Another Day in America", a piece from her 2010 album Homeland.

For much of Anderson's career, the voice was nameless or called the Voice of Authority, although as early as 2009[59] it was dubbed Fenway Bergamot at Lou Reed's suggestion.[58] The cover of Homeland depicts Anderson in character as Bergamot, with streaks of black makeup to give her a moustache and thick, masculine eyebrows.

In "The Cultural Ambassador", a piece on her album The Ugly One with the Jewels, Anderson explained some of her perspective on the character:

(Anderson:) I was carrying a lot of electronics so I had to keep unpacking everything and plugging it in and demonstrating how it all worked, and I guess I did seem a little fishy—a lot of this stuff wakes up displaying LED program readouts that have names like Atom Smasher, and so it took a while to convince them that they weren't some kind of portable espionage system. So I've done quite a few of these sort of impromptu new music concerts for small groups of detectives and customs agents and I'd have to keep setting all this stuff up and they'd listen for a while and they'd say: So um, what's this? And I'd pull out something like
(Bergamot:) this filter, and say, now this is what I like to think of as the voice of authority. And it would take me a while to tell them how I used it for songs that were, you know, about various forms of control, and they would say, now why would you want to talk like that? And I'd look around at the SWAT teams, and the undercover agents, and the dogs, and the radio in the corner, tuned to the Super Bowl coverage of the war. And I'd say, take a wild guess.

Personal life

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She moved to New York in 1966 and now lives in Tribeca.[60][9] Anderson met singer-songwriter Lou Reed in 1992, and she was married to him from April 2008 until his death in 2013.[61][62][63][64]

Anderson is a long-time student of Buddhism and meditation.[65] She first learned meditation on a retreat with the Insight Meditation Society in 1977.[65] She has since become a student of Tibetan Buddhist teacher Mingyur Rinpoche.[65]

Discography

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Studio albums

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Album and details Peak positions
US AUS[66] CH DE GR NL NZ SE UK CAN
Big Science
  • Date released: 1982
  • Record label: Warner Bros.
124  –  –  –  –  – 8  – 29[67]  –
Mister Heartbreak
  • Date released: 1984
  • Record label: Warner Bros.
60  – 19  –  – 23 12 46 93[67] 41[68]
Home of the Brave
  • Date released: 1986
  • Record label: Warner Bros.
145 74  –  –  –  – 14 34  – 84[69]
Strange Angels
  • Date released: 1989
  • Record label: Warner Bros.
171  –  –  –  –  –  –  –  –  –
Bright Red
  • Date released: 1994
  • Record label: Warner Bros.
195  –  –  –  –  –  –  –  –
Life on a String
  • Date released: 2001
  • Record label: Nonesuch Records
 –  –  – 84  –  –  –  –  –  –
Homeland
  • Date released: 2010
  • Record label: Nonesuch Records
 –  –  – 62[70] 41[70]  –  –  –  –  –
Amelia[71]
  • Date released: 2024
  • Record label: Nonesuch Records
 –  – 41[72]  –  –  –  –  –  –  –

Spoken word albums

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Live albums

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Compilation albums

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Audio book

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Collaborations

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Singles

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  • "O Superman" (1981) No. 28 AUS;[66] No. 2 UK;[67] BE (Vl) No. 19; IRL No. 11; NL No. 10; NZ No. 21
  • "Big Science" (1981)
  • "Sharkey's Day" (1984)
  • "Language Is a Virus" (1986) No. 96 AUS;[66]
  • "Strange Angels" (1989)
  • "Babydoll" (1989) No. 7 US Modern Rock
  • "Beautiful Red Dress" (1990)
  • "In Our Sleep" (1994)
  • "Big Science 2" (2007)
  • "Mambo and Bling" (2008)
  • "Only an Expert" (2010)[73]

The single "Sharkey's Day" was for many years the theme song of Lifetime Television. Anderson also recorded a number of limited-release singles in the late 1970s (many issued from the Holly Soloman Gallery), songs from which were included on a number of compilations, including Giorno Poetry Systems' The Nova Convention and You're the Guy I Want to Share My Money With. Over the years she has performed on recordings by other musicians such as Peter Gabriel, Lou Reed, and Jean Michel Jarre. She also contributed lyrics to the Philip Glass album Songs from Liquid Days, and contributed a spoken-word piece to a tribute album in honor of John Cage.

Music videos

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Anderson at a 2012 show

Formal music videos have been produced for:

  • "O Superman"
  • "Sharkey's Day"
  • "This Is the Picture (Excellent Birds)"
  • "Language Is a Virus" (from Home of the Brave)
  • "Beautiful Red Dress"

In addition, in lieu of making another music video for her Strange Angels album, Anderson taped a series of one- to two-minute "Personal Service Announcements" in which she spoke about issues such as the U.S. national debt and the arts scene. Some of the music used in these productions came from her soundtrack of Swimming to Cambodia. The PSAs were frequently shown between music videos on VH-1 in early 1990.

Films

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Digital media

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Legacy

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In 2013, Dale Eisinger of Complex ranked United States as the third greatest work of performance art ever, with the writer arguing that Anderson is "able to ascertain just exactly the climate of life in the United States, without being so punctuated that it causes a standoff. Perhaps the zenith of this configuration was her multimedia performance, 'United States I – IV.' [...] [Anderson displays] her vast, incisive range of talents on the 'United States Live' recordings."[75]

Awards and nominations

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Award Year Nominee(s) Category Result Ref.
Adelaide Film Festival 2015 Heart of a Dog Best Documentary Won [76]
Chicago International Film Festival 2015 Won
Cinema Eye Honors Awards 2016 Outstanding Achievement in Original Music Score Won
Outstanding Achievement in Direction Nominated
Outstanding Achievement in Graphic Design or Animation Nominated
Deutsche Schallplatten Prize 2001 Life on a String Deutsche Schallplatten Prize Won [77]
Film Independent Spirit Awards 2016 Heart of a Dog Best Documentary Feature Nominated [76]
Edison Awards 1983 Big Science Extra International Won [78]
Grammy Awards 1985 "Gravity's Angel" Best Instrumental Arrangement Accompanying Vocal(s) Nominated [79]
1991 Strange Angels Best Alternative Music Performance Nominated
2011 "Flow" Best Pop Instrumental Performance Nominated
2019 "Landfall" Best Chamber Music/Small Ensemble Performance Won
2021 Songs from the Bardo Best New Age Album Nominated
2024 Words & Music, May 1965 – Deluxe Edition Best Historical Album Nominated [80]
Gotham Awards 2015 Heart of a Dog Best Documentary Nominated [76]
Audience Award Nominated
La Roche-sur-Yon International Film Festival 2015 Prix Nouvelles Vagues Acuitis Nominated
Locarno International Film Festival 2005 Hidden Inside Mountains Golden Leopard - Video Nominated
2015 Herself Lifetime Achievement Award Won [81]
2022 Herself Vision Award Ticinomoda Won [82]
Charles Eliot Norton Lectures 2021–2022 Herself Charles Eliot Norton Professorship of Poetry at Harvard University awarded
Tenco Prize 2001 Herself Tenco Prize for Songwriting Won [77]
Tribeca Film Festival 2006 Hidden Inside Mountains Best Narrative Short Nominated [76]
Tromsø International Film Festival 2016 Heart of a Dog Aurora Award Won
Venice Film Festival 2015 Lina Mangiacapre Award Won
Golden Lion Nominated
Green Drop Award Nominated
Wolf Prize 2017 Herself Award for Art Won [83]

Television

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Audiobooks

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  • The Path to Tranquility by His Holiness the Dalai Lama – co-narrator, 1999
  • The Body Artist by Don DeLillo – sole narrator, 2001
  • Nothing in My Pockets – two-part sound diary recorded in 2003, orig. 2006 French radio broadcast, booklet with text and photography (Dis Voir, 2009) ISBN 978-2-914563-43-7 (also published in French)

Bibliography

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References

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  1. ^ Holden, Stephen (February 28, 1999). "Music; They're Recording, but Are They Artists?". The New York Times. Retrieved July 17, 2013.
  2. ^ a b Ankeny, Jason. "Laurie Anderson Biography". AllMusic. Retrieved June 12, 2016.
  3. ^ a b Fletcher, Kenneth R. "Anderson: The celebrated performance artist discusses Andy Warhol, NASA and her work at McDonald's". Smithsonian. Retrieved June 12, 2016.
  4. ^ a b Amirkhanian, Charles. "Women in Electronic Music – 1977". Liner note essay. New World Records.
  5. ^ "AE160D Unit 11: Laurie Anderson". Archived from the original on December 1, 2007.
  6. ^ Sachs, Ben (November 11, 2015). "Electronic musician Laurie Anderson takes to the big screen". Chicago Reader. Retrieved June 12, 2016.
  7. ^ Woodard, Josef (January 27, 2002). "Her Private Happy Meal". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved October 3, 2024.
  8. ^ Grabel, Leanne (April 9, 2024). "53 things about Laurie Anderson you may or may not know | Oregon ArtsWatch". Retrieved June 19, 2024.
  9. ^ a b c d Anderson, Sam (October 6, 2021). "Laurie Anderson Has a Message for Us Humans". The New York Times. Retrieved October 7, 2021.
  10. ^ a b Handy, Amy (1989). "Artist's Biographies – Laurie Anderson". In Randy Rosen; Catherine C. Brower (eds.). Making Their Mark. Women Artists Move into the Mainstream, 1970–1985. Abbeville Press. pp. 237–238. ISBN 0-89659-959-0.
  11. ^ "Music Article 0026". Amazings.com. Retrieved October 2, 2011.
  12. ^ "Art:21 . Laurie Anderson . Biography . Documentary Film". PBS. Retrieved October 2, 2011.
  13. ^ Papageorge, John. "Interview with Laurie Anderson". Silicon Valley Radio. Web Networks, Inc. Archived from the original on October 12, 2011. Retrieved November 10, 2011.
  14. ^ "Laurie Anderson". Otherminds.org. Archived from the original on September 27, 2011. Retrieved October 2, 2011.
  15. ^ "Laurie Anderson profile at". Discogs.com. June 5, 1947. Retrieved October 2, 2011.
  16. ^ "UbuWeb Sound – The Dial-A-Poem Poets: The Nova Convention". Ubu.com. Retrieved October 2, 2011.
  17. ^ Laurie Anderson, Stories from the Nerve Bible.
  18. ^ "Laurie Anderson at 1987 [UArts] commencement". UArts Libraries Digital Collections. Philadelphia, PA. May 16, 1987. Retrieved December 9, 2020.
  19. ^ "Laurie Anderson Record Release Party". Other Minds Archives. Retrieved May 24, 2024.
  20. ^ Harvey, James M. (2009). Singularia: Being at an Edge in Time: a Meditation and Thought Experiment While Crossing the Galactic Core. Alchemica Productions. p. 187. ISBN 978-0-9807574-1-5.
  21. ^ "Laurie Anderson official web site". Laurieanderson.com. Retrieved October 2, 2011.
  22. ^ "Laurie Anderson United States Live US Vinyl box set". RareVinyl.com. Retrieved June 19, 2024.
  23. ^ Feng, Emily (September 5, 2014). "'Good Morning Mr. Orwell': A Look Back at the Nam June Paik Video That Greeted 1984". asiasociety.org. Asia Society. Retrieved April 11, 2016.
  24. ^ Christgau, Robert. "CG: Laurie Anderson". Retrieved October 2, 2011.
  25. ^ "Berlinale: 1991 Juries". berlinale.de. Retrieved March 21, 2011.
  26. ^ "Laurie Anderson". IMDb. Retrieved April 24, 2014.
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Further reading

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