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Tennessee Rice Dixon
Starting from a painting and writing background, Tennessee Rice Dixon was one of the first artists
to work in digital animation (for example, her award-winning CD-ROM "ScruTiny in the Great Round"
and her CD-ROM "aCount") and then in live performance animation (e.g., her interactive multimedia
project "Backtide at the Altar"). Dixon is also an accomplished commercial designer and consultant
to several large companies. In her exquisite, meditative Roulette TV piece, she examines the personalities
of the historical Abel Flint, an American priest of the early 1800Ěs who wrote a book on geometry and
trigonometry meant for surveyors, and her own fictional character Abel Flint. This exploration is realized
through non-linear moving imagery of Midwestern flatlands, old letters and documents from Illinois, settlers
farming on nearly barren land, tools and diagrams of measurement (area maps, districting grids, arrows and
letters, a human protractor, geometric formulae, compass line extensions), still rivulets running off into
nighttime horizons that begin to fill with mysteriously undulating lights, and many other subtle and evocative
visuals. These un-romanticized, graceful montages lock the viewer into a period-authentic yet transcendental
experience. The performance is accompanied by live plaintive guitar gestures, occasional ambient sounds (a passing
train, crickets), folk singing, and an odd computer voice narration. In her interview, Dixon discusses her transition
from the artistĚs book to live digital animation, and her work on websites. Click here
to view clip.
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