Just gonna put it out there: I pretty much want to live in THE LOVE SONG OF R. BUCKMINSTER FULLER … I was reminded that strong entertainment value and contemporary art aren’t mutually exclusive forces.

“Review: Sam Green and Yo La Tengo's The Love Song of R. Buckminster Fuller”

by Matt Stangel

The Portland Mercury

Let me cut to the chase: The experience is an audiovisual marvel.

“TBA Diaries: Sam Green and Yo La Tengo, The Love Song of R. Buckminster Fuller”

by Rebecca Jacobson

Willamette Week

It’s a thoroughly modern mash-up, mixing visuals controlled by the narrator from a laptop (think PowerPoint, but not boring), with a score provided by a live band, like the in-house orchestra that would have accompanied a silent picture in the pre-talkie days.

“Yo La Tengo, a.k.a. the Buckminster Fuller Band”

by Kristin Belz

Portland Monthly Mag

LOVE SONG dates for Portland and Seattle

I’m excited to announce that tickets are now on sale for upcoming Seattle and Portland performances of THE LOVE SONG OF R. BUCKMINSTER FULLER. I’m going to be screening the film as Yo La Tengo performs their original score live at the Moore Theater in Seattle on 9/11 and at the Washington High School in Portland on 9/12. (The Portland show is part of the fantastic Time-Based Art Festival.)

One of the things that I really like about this “live documentary” form is that we can tailor the film to every city we visit. Buckminster Fuller was a Johnny Appleseed–like character—always on the road for new projects and lectures. So he has connections to almost any city.

In Seattle, we are going to incorporate the Laser Dome into the piece. (Who knew that there was still a venue out there dedicated to laser light shows????) The Seattle Laser Dome, originally called the Spacearium, was actually designed for the 1962 World’s Fair by a former student of Fuller’s named TC Howard. The dome is pictured above, on the top being built before the fair, and on the bottom in its current incarnation.

Info and tickets are available for Seattle here, and Portland here.

Buckminster Fuller Installation Shots

Many thanks to Mark Decena and Forrest Pound of Kontent Films for recently going to the SFMOMA and taking some fantastic pictures and footage of “Buckminster Fuller and the Bay Area: a Relationship in 12 Fragments (inspired by the Dymaxion Chronofile)”—this is the installation I made at the museum for their exhibit on Fuller. Many people have asked for more photos, so here you go. And if you’re in SF, the show will be up through the end of July, so do check it out in person.