John Roach is a California born, Brooklyn based artist who is most happy when he’s jamming things together that don’t seem to fit. With a playful use of materials, he sets procedures in motion that are not easily controlled: viewer-activated robots create a score for live musical performers; the fluctuation of the internet is harnessed to drive a sound composition; books are made to turn their own pages; foil from chocolate coins discarded by gallery visitors is used in a wind-controlled installation. These are just some of the tactics he has employed to coax indeterminate outcomes.
Earliest Instruments
John started making Instruments while studying for his Masters Degree in Painting at Hunter College in New York City. The original impetus was simply his interest in challenging music and sound works. Halfway through his degree he switched gears and started to engage with sound in his work.
The early instruments were made from whatever materials were on hand, cellos made from styrofoam blocks and played with rubber tubes, percussion instruments made from light bulbs and circular saw blades, boxes strung with wire that were pummeled by motors, etc.
The early instruments were made from whatever materials were on hand, cellos made from styrofoam blocks and played with rubber tubes, percussion instruments made from light bulbs and circular saw blades, boxes strung with wire that were pummeled by motors, etc.
BANDOPHONES
Bandophones are amplified instruments created with rubber bands. The simplicity of materials is appealing; who as a child has not created a guitar from a tissue box and some rubber bands? But the materials can also elicit some surprising sounds when played in unorthodox ways.
When played with a smooth shaft of a motor and lubricated with some water, they sing and croak and wail.
It is certainly possible to get notes from the instrument and tune it, but the nature of the elastic is that it falls out of tune quickly and tends to have a mind of its own. This is one of the reasons is attracted to this construction, it is hard to control.
He has been making bandophones since about 1999.
BANDOFLY
The Bandofly follows in the footsteps of the Bandophone – its sound is generated by the vibration of rubber bands, but in this case they are excited not by the spinning shaft of a motor, but by wind.
The instrument was created initially when he was given a toy called a bee buzzer as a gift and he wondered if he could make an amplified version. This led to a number of experiments and iterations of the device, and like the Bandophone it rarely sounds the same way twice.
Versions of the Bandofly have been created for specific performances and exhibitions including:
- Sterling Basement Live at Tonic 04/10/2002
- Bartók bogarai – Bartók’s Bugs – 2B Gallery, Budapest Hungary 12/2006
- Live Stage: Issue Project Room & WFMU – Curated by Tony Coulter 09/13/2008
- Postcards from the Gowanus – Cabinet Gallery 03/19/2010
Exhibitions and Workshops
More at johnroach.net
Selected Two Person Exhibitions
Surface (with Joshua Marks) – Sweet Lorraine Gallery, Brooklyn, NY.
Facetime #2 – John Roach & Gabriela Vainsencher. Parker’s Box. Brooklyn, NY
Robo-Improvisation Arena. (with Käthe Wenzel) Alma on Dobbin. Brooklyn, NY.
Selected Group Exhibitions
Odd Volumes: Book Art from the Allan Chasanoff Collection Yale University Art Gallery (2014)
Earlids – The Sheila C. Johnson Design Center. New York, NY. (2014)
Intangible – Lesley Heller Workspace. New York, NY. (2014)
The 5th Annual Artist Book Exhibition. King S. Stephen Museum. Székesfehérvár Hungary.(2013)
Sequence of Waves – Saint Cecelia Convent. Brooklyn, NY. (2011)
Special Choice Book Arts Part 1 & 2 – Williamsburg Art and Historical Center. Brooklyn, NY (2010)
The Self Destructing Art Show – Fluxfactory. Long Island City, NY. (2010)
Media MIXED X4. The BQEar. The BQEar - The Art Lot, Brooklyn, NY. (2010)
House Broken – Flux Factory. Long Island City, NY. (2010)
Everything Must Go! Fluxfactory. Long Island City, NY. (2008)
Trailhead. Free103.9 Wave Farm. Acra, NY (2007)
The Blur of the Otherworldly, an exhibition of technology and the paranormal. The Center for Art and Visual Culture, University of Maryland Baltimore County. Baltimore, MD. (2005)
The Green Ray. Parker’s Box. Brooklyn NY. (2005)
Simultaneous Translation V1 Universidad Autónoma. Madrid, Spain. (2004)
Sound and Complexity. Plan B Evolving Arts Center. Santa Fe, NM. (2001)
Performances and Workshops
Megapolis Festival - The Way Things Travel – Workshop and performance with Aaron Moore and festival participants. The New School, New York, NY. (2013)
Atlanta Spaces – Space is the Place (workshop and performance with Craig Dongoski and students). Georgia State University. Atlanta, GA. (2011)
Postcards from the Gowanus. Sterling Basement performance (with John Hudak, Aaron Moore and Dave Ruder). Cabinet Gallery Brooklyn, NY. (2010)
Songs of the Gowanus - Sterling Basement performance (with John Hudak, Matthew Rohrer, and Shawn Onsgard) Issue Project Room, New York, NY (2008)