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Science Friday, NPR, August 2015. Museum Plays Art and Technology Matchmaker and the legacy of LACMA’s first Art and Technology program

9/13/2015

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 "When the Los Angeles County Museum of Art launched its first Art & Technology program back in 1967, the idea of artists and technologists collaborating was radical—and the art world wasn’t quite ready."

GUESTS

Patrick McCray, Professor of History, University of California, Santa Barbara
John Craig Freeman, Public Artist, Professor of New Media Art, Emerson College
Brian Mullins, Founder, CEO, DAQRI, Los Angeles, California

From the Archives: Art and Technology at LACMA, 1967–1971 on view March 2015 - October 25, 2015.

US Pavilion, Japan World Expo, Osaka Expo ’70, laser sculpture by Rockne Krebs, 1970. Photo: The Masey Archives. The first ever laser beam switching system and prototype of the first laser light show, Rockne Krebs’ collaboration with Hewlett Packard Corporation. #ArtandTechnology Program 1967-1971, #ArtplusTech #ArtScience #LightArtist #RockneKrebs #HewlettPackard #Lasers . Seven American artists in the exhibition, Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, Claes Oldenburg, Tony Smith, Newton Harrison, Boyd Mefferd, Robert Whitman and Rockne Krebs. Curated by #MauriceTuchman http://www.metaformdesigninternational.com/1970-osaka/ #WorldExpo #WorldExpo70

A photo posted by Rockne Krebs (@rocknekrebs) on Aug 12, 2015 at 4:40pm PDT

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Crystal Willow: Art Preservation Relocation Project

3/9/2015

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Crystal Willow slideshow presentation click here.

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Photo: Crystal Willow, Rest in light Rockne Krebs, December 2011  © Lars Hasselblad Torres

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Art at the Speed of Light by Patrick McCray

12/27/2014

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"After physicists first demonstrated the optical laser in May 1960, scientists and engineers started thinking of what they could do with it. So did artists."   (For complete article by Patrick McCray click here.)

"Another notable effort was by Rockne Krebs, an American artist who made laser-based sculptures for several years starting in the late 1960's." 

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"Over time, Krebs expanded his focus from small-scale efforts using lasers in rooms and galleries to ambitious outdoor installations that incorporated building and landscapes into the work. Harking back – unconsciously, most likely – to Garmire’s experiments, his piece The Green Hypotenuse (1983) used a 7 mile-long laser beam that stretched from the observatory on Mt. Wilson down to Caltech."

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"A key difference between Garmire’s “lasergrams” and installations made by artists like Krebs is the latter’s ephemeral nature. When the laser was turned off, the art disappeared. All that’s left are the sketches that went into its planning – “drawings for sculpture you can walk through” according to the title for one Krebs’ exhibit...." 

 - Patrick McCray

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Happy Holidays! Christmas Lights Kansas City, Missouri, 1956, by Rockne Krebs.

12/21/2014

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Christmas Lights Kansas City, Missouri, 1956, by Rockne Krebs. 

“I find CITY LIGHTS painted in 1956 by Krebs as a teenager of the Christmas lights in the Plaza in Kansas City, prophetic of the homages to the urban landscape that he would create a decade and a half later and would describe in a 1972 essay titled Light Is The City At Night.  In the interim Krebs would pursue the rather typical course of the serious student artist, majoring in sculpture at the University of Kansas with the sculptors Elden Tefft, Bernard Frazier, Jim Bass and James Sterrit.  The fact of his long artistic apprenticeship has been over looked because he appeared to most art world observers to have been born with lasers in the sixties….”   Jay Belloli, 1990

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Sam Gilliam, Carol Harrison, Rockne Krebs and ping pong

7/13/2014

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I first met Rockne in 1982.  Sam Gilliam asked him to come downstairs from his studio to beat me in ping pong.

I won.

Rockne won the second game by one point.

We never played again.

I followed the anonymous “artist” upstairs to his studio to photograph the stormy aftermath of the games.  To my surprise, I discovered that I had just played Rockne Krebs!  My disbelief did not amuse him. 
-  Carol Harrison, 2011

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Photograph © Carol Harrison

Rockne, Sam and I agreed to meet at their studios on 14th & U.  
I would photograph the 2 of them “for the art history books.”  
It unfolded differently than I imagined.  – Carol Harrison

“I Had a Friend in High School”

We would play tennis until we were both on the verge of heat exhaustion.  Then we would hop in Rockne’s Mercury coupe and head to the drive-in for cold sodas….  At first our tennis matches were one sided.  I would always win primarily because Rockne’s backhand was terrible.  But, Rockne had a singleness of purpose which was to beat me, so he took lessons and developed a really strong forehand shot.   Rockne would not fall for any fake moves I would make.  - Charles (Charlie) Thomas Payne  

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High School yearbook photo of Rockne.
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Photograph © Carol Harrison

“My serve is so good, 
even you would be surprised.  
I am fond of this waiting expecting photo- I feel comfortable with chair legs to see/ in order to see trees…” 
Sam Gilliam 
(a note to Carol Harrison)

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 “I am in your debt, and all I did was stand briefly in front of your camera.  Sincerely, Rockne Krebs, Sept. 2008  P.S. And beat you in ping pong.  Ho, Ho, Ho! Thank you, Thank you, Thank you! Thank you!”

(This note relates to Carol Harrison’s photo of Rockne Krebs in “A Kansas City Tribute to Rockne Krebs.” 

A historical correction:  Ms. Harrison won the first fierce game of ping pong.  Mr. Krebs won the even fiercer second game, after the score was tied at 21 points.  Sam Gilliam arranged the championship match in his studio.)

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Photograph © Carol Harrison
- HK
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Rockne saved me by agreeing to do a commercial job... by Marc Palumbo

6/8/2014

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Rockne saved me by agreeing to do a commercial job
(I believe his only one)
for a GE marketing campaign with me.



When I picked him 
up at the airport he looked like 
John Wayne,
big cowboy hat,
big lined sheepskin coat.


When he saw me he 
grinned, big,
I knew there was 
light at the end of the tunnel as he was walking towards me. Rockne Krebs - was my  –  is my hero.


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Photograph © Carol Harrison
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Photograph © Carol Harrison



He fired a gun into the ceiling at C.A.V.S.
while Otto Piene was talking.
I would say it was 1978.

I asked him twice about this years later…

…and he walked away mumbling something about it was just a 
pop gun. 1*

- Marc Palumbo
October 15, 2011

1*  Harrison, Carol.  Rockne Krebs Photographs + Interpretations, 2013. 
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Thank you library & archives staff at LACMA’s Library!  Balch Art Research Library

5/26/2014

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Thank you library & archives staff at LACMA’s Library!  
Balch Art Research Library

LACMA Unframed / Balch Library: Before and After

“…the renovated library is now also home to the new 
Art + Technology Lab…
Library displays feature special selections from the archives, hand-picked by the library and archives staff.  Currently, you’ll find fascinating documentation from the original Art and Technology program that ran from 1967 to 1971, including a drawing by artist Rockne Krebs for his laser-beam installation, produced in collaboration with the Hewlett-Packard Corporation.  
Displayed alongside is a letter of recommendation by curator 
Sam Wagstaff on behalf of artist James Lee Byars, playfully hand scrawled in crayon….” April 21, 2014

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Tuchman, Maurice. Art and Technology, A report on the Art and Technology Program of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 
1967-1971
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“Of the 38 major pieces I’ve made in the last 10 years, two still exist.  Perhaps I ought to start making still-lifes of flowers.” Rockne Krebs, 1977, The Washington Post.

5/4/2014

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‘Rockne Krebs is recognized as one of Washington’s finest artists.  Krebs “Of the 38 major pieces I’ve made in the last 10 years, two still exist.  Perhaps I ought to start making still-lifes of flowers.”’  *1

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Art International, 1974. Rite de Passage, by Rockne Krebs, 1971.




Rite de Passage, in honor of Mrs. Edgar B. Stern, a gift by the Stern family to the New Orleans Museum of Art.

Art International, May 1974 XVIII/5.  Cover photograph: Passage 5 from Rite de Passage, an argon laser work by Rockne Krebs, installed in the portico of the New Orleans Museum in 1971.  

“I think of these as pieces which you experience in total but see only in sequence or passages.  The experience is a remembered experience, almost as a piece of music of which you hear the progression.  In this case you see the progression of the piece and your final total experience is one of memory.”  
Rockne Krebs, 1970 *2

 “’Crazy, man!’ is the way young people describe it as the beam dances merrily as it bounces off trees, the waters of the lagoon…” *3

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Drawing by Rockne Krebs, Rite de Passage, New Orleans Museum of Art.
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The Art Gallery Magazine, November 1971.  
Magazine cover, drawing by Rockne Krebs of his piece Rite de Passage at the New Orleans Museum of Art, New Orleans, LA.  
"One of the more spectacular accomplishments to this month’s re-opening of New Orleans’ old Isaac Delgado Museum promises to be a laser beam sculpture by Rockne Krebs.  The artist’s conception of what the work will look like in action appears on our cover.”


“I was disheartened to read Rockne’s 1977 statement, that of the thirty-eight major pieces he had made, only four were still extant.

Rockne’s sobering quote speaks volumes about the temporal nature of all art.  However, there is one piece that certainly exists and has become a touchstone for me.  Miami Line is a signature Krebs light sculpture that stretches for a third of a mile along the under edge of a Metrorail overpass in downtown Miami ….”  *4
William Dunlap, Dec. 2, 2011

“...Krebs’s made one feel extremely happy and proud to be alive at a particular time and place…”  *5

- HK
*1.  Richard, Paul.   Making It as An Artist, The Washington Post, 1977.  
*2.  The Sixth National Sculpture Conference, 1970, National Sculpture Center, the University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS.  Edited by Elden C. Tefft, published 1971.  Published transcript of Krebs’ lecture.
*3.  Griffin, Thomas.  One-the Beam Museum Draws ‘Em Like Moths, The States-Item New Orleans, 1971.
*4.  Harrison, Carol.  Rockne Krebs Photographs + Interpretations, 2013. 
*5.  Forgey, Benjamin.  Art Life on the Edges, essay, Washington Art Matters: Art Life in the Capital 1940-1990, 2013.
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The Neon Bridge revisited, by Neil Johnson.  Rockne Krebs’ Red River Bridge public art sculpture, Shreveport, LA.  The Shreveport Times

4/20/2014

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Photo © Neil Johnson | Used with permission

Shreveport/Bossier's Texas Street bridge glows from the neon
lights that were installed in 1994.

Neil Johnson: The Neon Bridge revisited
The Shreveport Times, Apr. 16, 2014

In 1993, Mayor Hazel Beard flipped a switch and the Texas Street
Bridge — officially, the Long-Allen Bridge, built in 1934 — soon became known as The Neon Bridge.

Even though many people questioned its cost and scratched their
heads over all the hoop-la, the goal of Shreveport officials (City Hall,
Downtown Development Authority, and Shreveport Regional Arts Council) was to create a signature piece of public art that would not only help define Shreveport in a creative, strikingly visual, and very public way, but connect Shreveport with its sister city on the other side of the river.

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Photo © Neil Johnson | Used with permission. Krebs on The Neon Bridge.

Rockne Krebs (1938-2011), an artist from Washington D.C.,
well-known for experimenting with laser beams and other light sources as his medium, won the commission to create his vision. Other than the mostly red neon, Krebs also included two huge spotlights aimed straight up from the foot of each side of the bridge and planned for a laser to shoot from the top of the bridge down Texas Street and past the First United Methodist Church
steeple.

Despite an engineering struggle, the laser facet of the project
failed in the offset.  Years later, the spotlights would be turned off and finally removed.  The neon remained on, but, sadly, it was discovered that constant vibration and road dust and grime were the enemies of neon fixtures and tubes.  The tubes began to fail and be replaced, but eventually the speed at which the neon failed outstripped the maintenance money to replace them.  Repairing the neon was both very difficult and very inconvenient.

After the bridge succeeded in becoming an artistic icon, today, there is much grumbling about the “non-neon bridge.”  Only a small percentage of it remains lit.

But fans of the art should take heart!

Pam Atchison, SRAC executive director, assured me that, first, everyone is quite aware of the condition of the neon artwork, and secondly, there is ongoing activity below radar to find the money to, not only replace the lights, but replace the neon with a type of LED light that strongly resembles neon and is much more stable.  Though not exactly the same product, check out the “neon” on the Tourist Bureau mural some evening.
 
Atchison said they had been shooting for the end of 2014 for the
neon rehab, but it will probably be in 2015.  With an extremely tight city budget, it’s mostly about finding just the right grant to apply for — and win.

When the next switch is thrown, I will be standing on the riverbank, excited to see the lit bridge again reflected gloriously in the river below.  To the Neon Bridge doubters, I will once again state, “It is a work of art, created by a sculptor using light to transform the bridge. It is not decoration.”

I might also add: Patience.

Neil Johnson is the owner of Neil Johnson Photography and is
based in Shreveport-Bossier City.

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The Red River Bridge proposal, Rockne Krebs, 1991. Krebs’ first study and original submission drawing for "The Neon Bridge." © Estate of Rockne Krebs/Licensed by VAGA, NY, NY.

On the back of the drawing: “Red River Dave strumming to sundown on the Red River and contemplating the reflection of the Texas Street Bridge.  Red River Dave was a Texas cowboy singer from the 33 rpm record era.” Rockne Krebs, 9/1991.

Krebs titled his light sculpture on the Texas Street Bridge, The Red River Bridge, it soon became known as The Neon Bridge.

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The Red River Bridge, 1993 © Estate of Rockne Krebs/Licensed by VAGA, NY, NY.

A wonderful video of Shreveport/Bossier’s waterfront with
stunning Neon Bridge footage, Dec. 2008.
“Shreveport, Louisiana's Nighttime Waterfront Skyline”
by  TheManTheyCallRon

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In Memory of Philip M. Smith, 1932-2014

4/17/2014

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In Memory of Philip M. Smith 
1932-2014

Philip M. Smith, of Santa Fe, New Mexico, was a leader in national and international science and technology policy.  He was the Director of the National Research Council of the National Academies of Sciences and Engineering in the 1980s and 1990s.  Previously
he was an Associate Director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy in the Ford and Carter administrations.

Phil Smith and Rockne Krebs had a friendship that spanned more
than four decades, and a strong mutual respect for each other’s life's
work.

Phil's friendship, sound advice and guidance will be sadly missed. 
 –  HK

In Phil’s words -

 “Rockne Krebs: An Appreciation
Rockne and I met not long after his breakout show in the 1960s at
the Corcoran where “Ra” and his other site-specific pieces took the Washington and indeed the national art world by storm.  I sought him and we met for dinner.  We hit it off, starting a life-long friendship that only ended with his death in 2011. 

Although I knew the work of “light artists” such as Dan Flavin, I was
intrigued by Rockne’s vision for using light to create monumental environmental works as well as smaller pieces.  He was fascinated by my world of science and technology and the latest discoveries in all fields.  So we became fast friends, talking long into the night at his studio, at my house in Washington, DC, and on visits at the country studio in Burgess, Virginia.  He visited me for lunch at the White
House Mess, one time with Lynda Benglis in tow and at the National Academy of Sciences where I arranged an exhibition of his drawings. 
With a huge number of other friends we watched the bicentennial fireworks on the Mall in 1976. 

One evening at his DC studio, fueled by some wine, I described current research in lightning, telling Rockne that if we could capture all the daily lightning discharges on earth we could supply electricity to all humankind.  A couple months later I saw “Lightning Sculpture," an imaginary piece that created a machine to harness lightning thus creating huge sculptural works in the sky. It was another sculptural use of light from Rockne’s standpoint.  The drawing hung in my office in the big Victorian executive office building west of the White House for six years and then in my office at the National Academy of Sciences for a decade.  With Rockne’s concurrence I gave  “Lightning Sculpture” to the Spencer Museum of Art, University of Kansas (his
alma mater) in 2010.”      Philip M. Smith, January, 12, 2012

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Phil and Rockne at the Baxter Art Gallery of the California Institute of Technology, 1983.
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Rockne and Phil, late 1970’s
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