David Tudor: Circuits, Resonance, Collaborations
The concert soundscape arranged by Phil Edelstein, John D.S. Adams, Michael Johnsen, and Gökhan Deneç included dynamic visuals from “Fragments and Their Shadows 2024″ by Sophia Ogielska and Phil Edelstein, based on the artwork by David Tudor and Sophia Ogielska.
unexpected territories by singuhr— projekte explores the traces and collaborations of American composer, performer, and pioneer of live electronic music David Tudor (1926 — 1996).
The focus of unexpected territories is on the influences of Tudor’s ideas, utopias, and works on the present. Tudor’s artistic companions, selected sound artists and composers, are invited to reflect on David Tudor’s works and concepts and to work with them in new artistic productions.
Photographs by Daniel Pepper
Teasing chaos is the first retrospective of David Tudor, performer, composer, and interdisciplinary artist. His art spanned diverse areas, from virtuoso avant-garde piano performances to groundbreaking compositions embodied in electronic circuits he created to live performances of electronic music and art projects with visual artists. Teasing Chaos brings together a selection of Tudor’s archival material, electronic instruments, installations, video and audio recordings, and collaborative visual works.
The exhibition includes an immersive installation of Toneburst Maps and Fragments: Map 4 and Ideogram Cluster, integrated with the sound space created through multi-channel recordings of Tudor’s composition Untitled/Toneburst.
MdM also published an illustrated book with essays by David Behrman, Billy Klüver/Julie Martin, Patricia Lent, Alan Licht, You Nakai, Christina Penetsdorfer, Matt Rogalsky, Thorsten Sadowsky and Christian Wolff
“E.A.T. (Experiments in Art and Technology): Open-ended” at MMCA was the first retrospective in Korea of the works and projects created in E.A.T.’s multidisciplinary collaborations.
The retrospective included the site-specific installation of works from Tudor and Ogielska’s Toneburst Maps and Fragments project, accompanied by a binaural recording of Tudor’s Toneburst created by John D. S. Adams.

The exhibition of Toneburst Maps and Fragments concluded the sequence of events celebrating the 50th Anniversary of the founding of Experiments in Art & Technology (E.A.T.) by two artists, Robert Rauschenberg and Robert Whitman, and two Bell Labs engineers, Billy Klüver and Fred Waldhauer.
The installation also accompanied an evening of performances and a panel discussion.
The first show of Toneburst: Maps and Fragments was in the Zilkha Gallery at Wesleyan University. David Tudor visited the gallery shortly before his death to listen to its acoustics, and John D.S. Adams carried out the design of the sound space accompanying the exhibition.

A grant from The Robert Rauschenberg Foundation made possible the printing of the illustrated catalogue, with additional funding from the Foundation for Contemporary Performance Arts, founded by Jasper Johns and John Cage.
Professors Ellen D’Oench, Ron Kuivila, and Alvin Lucier assisted in organizing this exhibition at the Ezra and Cecile Zilkha Gallery, Wesleyan University.
© 2019-2026 Sophia Ogielska. All rights reserved