Skip to main content

Bob Snyder: Sound and Video 1975-1990

A compilation of works by Bob Snyder, remarkable for their formal elegance, conceptual scope and sensual lusciousness.

# Title Artists Run Time Year Country
1 Winter Notebook Bob Snyder 00:06:00 1975 United States
2 Icron Bob Snyder 00:11:00 1978 United States
3 Lines of Force Bob Snyder 00:10:00 1979 United States
4 Trim Subdivisions Bob Snyder 00:06:00 1981 United States
5 Spectral Brands Bob Snyder 00:15:00 1984 United States
6 Hard and Flexible Music Bob Snyder 00:06:00 1988 United States

Winter Notebook

Bob Snyder
1975 | 00:06:00 | United States | English | Color | Stereo | 4:3 | Video

DESCRIPTION

This tape exemplifies Snyder’s early experiments with the image processor. Articulated patterns of alternating wavelength and amplitude of both sound and light are arranged to produce abstract compositions. Voltages processed by an Emu sound synthesizer are systematized through characteristic interval structures that affect the image processor’s functions.

This title is also available on Bob Snyder: Sound and Video 1975-1990.

Icron

Bob Snyder
1978 | 00:11:00 | United States | English | Color | | 4:3 | Video

DESCRIPTION

Using the image processor as it was intended as a performance instrument, Icron exploits the processor’s real-time capabilities: the image and soundtrack were generated through simultaneous improvisation, although the color was added later. The title of the piece is a neologism created by fusing "icon" with "chron" as a reference to the effect of temporal changes on images. Snyder combines iconographic elements of broadcast television with the structural features of music by deconstructing the face of a newscaster into scan lines. The newscaster’s speech is also re-modulated to produce a cartoonish effect that is equally humorous and sinister. Because the content of his discourse is obscured, only the rhetorical tics of authoritarian pronouncement remain.

This title is also available on Bob Snyder: Sound and Video 1975-1990.

Lines of Force

Bob Snyder
1979 | 00:10:00 | United States | English | Color | | 4:3 | Video

DESCRIPTION

Lines of Force opens with footage of a dramatic explosion. For most of the piece, the screen is divided, into a triptych at first, and slowly into horizontal and vertical bars. Electronically manipulated footage shows a man walking, a marching band, ferns, cartoons, a window, and a train arriving on a set of tracks. The naturally occurring lines in the array of images presented mirror the electronically created bars and lines that divide the screen. Natural scenes provide a respite from the frantic pace of the images.

This title is also available on Bob Snyder: Sound and Video 1975-1990.

Trim Subdivisions

Bob Snyder
1981 | 00:06:00 | United States | English | Color | | 4:3 | Video

DESCRIPTION

This tape deviates from the more purely formal investigations of Snyder’s earlier work; it has no soundtrack and uses camera images exclusively. Employing Quantel digital effects and editing procedures, a novelty in video post-production at the time, Snyder manipulates images of tract houses shot in a small Indiana town. Cubist re-constructions of the monotonous facades fracture spatial planes into intricate geometric arrangements, with frames enclosing frames, spiralling like Chinese boxes. Based upon the confining regularity of the architecture, the repetitive box-form serves as a metaphor for the regimentation of life in industrial societies, while the silence suggests tension and aridity rather than serenity. The rhythm of the wipes that unfurl from the borders is emphasized by the eerie stillness.

This title is also available on Bob Snyder: Sound and Video 1975-1990.

Spectral Brands

Bob Snyder
1984 | 00:15:00 | United States | English | Color | Stereo | 4:3 | Video

DESCRIPTION

[This] is my first attempt to construct a video piece using one set of generative intervals for both sound and color. All of the color in the piece is orchestrated in brightness ‘octaves’ corresponding to the registration of the pitches in the soundtrack. Each hue from a circle of twelve corresponds to one of the pitches of a tempered scale. The articulation of the piece consists of a series of loudness and brightness ripples which move across the piece in speed relationships derived from the hue and pitch proportions. The image content, or the ‘instruments’ through which the colors resonate, are an alphabetical set of identifying symbols for 32 of the largest corporations in the world.

-- Bob Snyder

This title is also available on Bob Snyder: Sound and Video 1975-1990.

Hard and Flexible Music

Bob Snyder
1988 | 00:06:00 | United States | English | Color | | 4:3 | Video

DESCRIPTION

In this video diptych, Snyder uses image and music to depict opposing forces in semi-abstract terms. Exploring processes of fracture and permutation, Hard and Flexible Music contrasts two groups of images, gridded architectural structures and fluid natural imagery, on opposite sides of the screen. The experimental music soundtrack carries two synthesized tracks with differing musical qualities.

This title is also available on Bob Snyder: Sound and Video 1975-1990.