Church of the Friendly Ghost

Church of the Friendly Ghost aka COTFG is a volunteer-run arts organization supporting creative expression and counter-culture community. COTFG activities may include experiments in sound composition, custom made electronics, improvisation, cross-genre collaborations and site-specific performances, and future-minded creative musics.[1]

Conception

Church of the Friendly Ghost was originally established in the fall of 2003 when a group of friends began hosting performances and other artistic activities in a small former church building at 209 Pedernales Street in Austin, Texas.[2] Over the years, the organization has presented over one thousand events. In 2007, COTFG became a sponsored project of Salvage Vanguard Theater, a tax-exempt, non-profit organization. Also in 2007, the church re-located to a performance space on Manor Rd.

NMASS

In 2009, COTFG created a festival, originally called the Modern Aural Sculpture Symposium South, to provide opportunities to explore music through workshops, lectures on compositional techniques, improvisation demonstrations, interviews with musicians, art installations, experimental musics, and performances of local artists at both the festival location and throughout the city of Austin. In 2010, COTFG expanded the festival into a three-day event and renamed it the New Media Art and Sound Summit, or the "NMASS Fest." The yearly festival emphasizes multidisciplinary collaboration and creation with the intention of attracting attention to Austin's creative community.

NMASS Fest and the COTFG series of performances are made possible by community patrons, and through their partnership with Salvage Vanguard Theater COTFG is also funded and supported in part by the City of Austin through the Cultural Arts Division, and the Texas Commission on the Arts.

Recognition

  • City of Austin Cultural Arts Division Cultural Contact (since 2008)
  • Met Life Arts
  • Austin Chronicle - "Best Of"

References

  1. "About | COTFG". friendlyghost.org. Retrieved 2018-05-11.
  2. "History -". Retrieved 2018-05-11.

Sources

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