Electric Shadows

In the mid-1990s, Brazilian filmmaker Orlando Senna visited Fernando Birri in Cuba. The meeting took place at the Habana Libre Hotel, where nearly seventy-year-old Birri was eager to show his latest works—not on paper, but emerging from the screen of his new Macintosh computer. Birri had discovered a new expressive medium through digital drawing, experimenting with Kid Pix, a creative software originally designed for children. “I think I’ve finally found my working instrument,” 1 he told Senna. The glifotronics 2 were born.

Driven by a lifelong commitment to exploring every technology and new modes of expression, the computer provided Birri with a crucial tool—one through which he could experiment with light, form and chance using what he called “the machine touched by the grace of the Electronic Mystery.” 3 These works exist within a layered temporality, combining cutting-edge technology with Birri’s enduring themes: myth, sexuality and the cosmos. He printed and reproduced them, creating a form of electronic art that expands across media and borders.

  1. Vieites, Mary and David Blaustein, Fernando Birri: La primavera del Patriarca. Buenos Aires: Museo del Cine Pablo C. Ducrós Hicken; Altamira, 2004, p. 69. 

  2. Fernando Birri also spelled the term as Glifotronik

  3. Birri, Fernando and Jorge Ruffinelli, Soñar con los ojos abiertos: Las treinta lecciones de Stanford, 1st ed. Buenos Aires: Aguilar, 2007, pp. 365-366. 

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