Bill Fontana
Bill Fontana is an American composer and artist who developed an international reputation for his pioneering experiments in sound. He has worked for the past 45 years creating installations that use sound as a sculptural medium to interact with and transform our perceptions of visual and architectural settings. These have been installed in public spaces and museums around the world including San Francisco, New York, Rome, Paris, London, Chicago, Vienna, Berlin, Venice, Sydney, Tokyo, Barcelona, Linz, Manchester, Istanbul and Abu Dhabi. Bill’s sound sculptures use the human and/or natural environment as a living source of musical information. He assumes that at any given moment there will be something meaningful to hear and that music, in the sense of coherent sound patterns, is a process that is going on constantly. His methodology has been to create networks of simultaneous listening points that relay real time acoustic data to a common listening zone (sculpture site). Since 1976 Bill has called these works sound sculptures.
Residency: Getty PST ART 2024 X UCLA Art|Sci Center
Statement
I began my career as a composer. What really began to interest me was not so much the music that I could write but the states of mind I would experience when I felt musical enough to compose. In those moments, when I became musical, all the sounds around me also became musical. I have worked for the past 50 years creating installations that use sound as a sculptural medium to interact with and transform our perceptions of visual and architectural settings. These have been installed in public spaces and museums around the world including San Francisco, New York, Rome, Paris, London, Chicago, Vienna, Berlin, Venice, Sydney, Tokyo, Barcelona, Linz, Manchester, Istanbul and Abu Dhabi. My sound sculptures use the human and/or natural environment as a living source of musical information. I am assuming that at any given moment there will be something meaningful to hear and that music, in the sense of coherent sound patterns, is a process that is going on constantly. My methodology has been to create networks of simultaneous listening points that relay real time acoustic data to a common listening zone (sculpture site). Since 1976 I have called these works sound sculptures. I have produced a large number of works that explore the idea of creating live listening networks. These all use a hybrid mix of transmission technologies that connect multiple sound retrieval points to a central reception point. What is significant in this process are the conceptual links determining the relationships between the selected listening points and the site-specific qualities of the reception point (sculpture site). Some conceptual strategies have been acoustic memory, the total transformation of the visible (retinal) by the invisible (sound), hearing as far as one can see, the relationship of the speed of sound to the speed of light, and the deconstruction of our perception of time.
Proposal
Silent Echoes: Notre-Dame, a continued series of sound amplifications, will be installed in the bell tower of UCLA’s Royce Hall.
Project Research
Nov 11th, 2020 | Artist in Residence: Bill Fontana, visit to UCLA Vibrations Matter seminar
Bill Fontana visits UCLA Design Media Arts Graduate Seminar Vibrations Matter lecture.
Sept 11th, 2020 | Artist in Residence: Bill Fontana, Soundscapes
An artistic research project about the quality of timelessness–a meditation at the San Francisco Bay during the COVID-19 crisis. The piece is composed of sound and visuals that explore this special period when normal reality has stopped and our sense of time has been disrupted. The artist will use the online platform to explore the phenomenon of time. Presented as part of the Inherent Uncertainty Series of online performances.
Oct 29th, 2020 | UCLA Art|Sci and Leonardo Art Science Evening Rendezvous (LASER) Talk
This gathering will feature our inaugural Atmosphere of Sound artist-in-residence, Bill Fontana (San Francisco), along with George Quasha (New York), John Beaulieu (New York), Carlo Ventura (Italy), Anna Nacher (Slovakia), and Nina Waisman (Los Angeles). We will be addressing their research and work with sound, vibration, and frequencies in relation to healing and ecology. Hosted and moderated by UCLA Art Sci director, Victoria Vesna (Los Angeles).
Further Involvement: UCLA Art|Sci Center


May 2nd, 2019 | Sound + Science 2.0 Symposium
The UCLA Art|Sci Center + Lab proudly announces the Sound + Science Symposium 2.0 – a decade after the first gathering in March, 2009 (Sound + Science 1.0). Join us for a two-day symposium with sound artists, scientists and humanists exploring all kinds of vibrations, audible and inaudible. This extraordinary event will bring together leading figures to discuss the applications and implications of such research in relation to questions of culture, politics, history, environment, art, and music.
April 5th, 2018 | Leonardo Art Science Evening Rendezvous, with Bill Fontana, Michelle McAuliffe, Jonathan Moore, and Haytham Nawar
Following an opening reception for Haytham Nawar’s exhibition Collective Bread Diaries: A Taste of Protest, join us for our monthly LASER talk!


April 5th, 2018 | Art|Sci DMA Lecture Series: Bill Fontana, Acoustical Visions
A presentation given to Victoria Vesna’s Fiat Lux class about Fontana’s recent work exploring the image that a sound makes and the sounds that an image makes.