Ultra-red

Ultra-red is a Los Angeles–based sound art collective founded in 1994 by AIDS activists Dont Rhine and Marco Larsen. The group has since expanded to include artists, researchers, and organizers across North America and Europe, engaging in social movements such as migration rights, anti-racism, participatory community development, and the politics of HIV/AIDS. Ultra-red is known for its “militant sound research,” a methodology that combines acoustic ecology with political activism.

The collective’s projects often involve community-based listening sessions, radio broadcasts, performances, and installations that explore how sound can reflect and influence social relations. Notable initiatives include “Soundtrax” (1992–1996), which investigated needle exchange spaces; “Second Nature” (1995–1998), focusing on public sex; and “Structural Adjustments” (1997–2003), examining the state of public housing in Los Angeles. Collaboratively, the members of Ultra-red have produced radio broadcasts, performances, recordings, installations, texts, and public space actions (“ps/o”). In the mid-90s, Ultra-red launched the electronic music club, Public Space. “Ground zero” for Los Angeles’ nascent electronic music community, Public Space served as a hub for a diverse group of essential electronic musicians, including those associated with the Plug Research label, noise musicians like the group Fin, and out-of-town acts like Spacetime Continuum, Autechre, and numerous other hallmarks of Los Angeles’ 1990s underground electronic scene.

Operating for over 30 years between the realms of sound art and modern electronic music, Ultra-red pursues a fragile but dynamic exchange between art and political organizing. Today, Ultra-red stands out in the artistic activism space, given that its founders see themselves as activists-turned-to-art under contexts of urgency (rather than artists-turned-activists). For example, in the early stages of Soundtrax, and in the midst of the devastating heroin and AIDS/HIV epidemics of the 1990s (mutually-reinforcing issues), an increase in police harassment in the streets necessitated documentation, especially during an intervention undertaken by Ultra-red founders Rhine and Larsen to get clean needles to the public (alongside a LA’s first syringe exchange program, Clean Needles Now). However, given the obstructive nature of camera equipment in the early 1990s, Rhine and Larsen opted to carry audio-recording devices to capture evidence of the difficult exchange with the police and local security squads. The audio recordings, which were cut and mixed into avant-guard electronic soundtracks, served as essential early evidence against the police’s obstructive commands against harm-reduction initiatives (revealing greater political agendas in the United States that stood and remain against substance harm-reduction). The avant-guard methods employed by Ultra-red in public interventions like Soundtrax also serve as a precursor to mainstream contemporary formats, three decades later, such as filming police covertly as a self-defense/documentation procedure.

City

Los Angeles

Country

United States

Region

N. America

Year of Creation

1994

Featured Project

¿Guess Work?
In 1997, students and activists across LA led a powerful campaign against the labor practices and sweatshop operations of the brand, Guess. At the time, the members of Ultra-red became heavily involved in a few various labor organizations in LA, including Pride At Work / AFL-CIO and the LA Metropolitan Chapter of the Labor Party. Both organizations endorsed UNITE’s anti-sweatshop action— the main campaign force behind the protest movement— and compelled Ultra-red to attend rallies, demonstrations, and teach-ins with their ever-present microphone and portable DAT (Digital Audio Tape-recorder) in hand. Armed with only a battery for site-recordings of the organizing events, recordings of radio broadcasts, and a smattering of commercials from Guess, in 1997, Ultra-red composed material for a performance they dubbed, “Guess Works.” The material in Guess Works was showcased in numerous clubs in Los Angeles, including the group’s April 1997 appearance at The Troubadour, where they opened for Atari Teenage Riot founder, Alec Empire. These features in club settings brought the labor organizing campaign to the forefront of the nightclub scene, blending politics into the most carefree aspects of daily life for young people and youth in Los Angeles, rendering the issue undeniable and urgent. The tracks in Guess Works were later compiled on the self-produced six-track audio cassette of the same name (since deleted). In October of that year, Ultra-red joined forces with visual artist Valerie Tevere to produce the solo-artist installation “¿Guess Work?” at the now-closed Spanish Kitchen Art Gallery blocks away from LA’s garment district, bringing the campaign to audiences in the fine arts world.

Resources

Anderson, Sven. “VOICES OF MEMORY – SOUND ART IN PUBLIC SPACES.” Goethe Institut, 16 Jun. 2016, https://www.goethe.de/ins/ie/en/kul/sup/vom/kla.html.

Basekamp & Friends. “Week 39: Ultra-red.” Plausible Art Worlds, 2013. Print. https://www.plausibleartworlds.org/node/110.html.

“Creative Time Summit | Ultra-Red (represented by Don Ryan).” Uploaded by Creative Time to YouTube, 24 Aug. 2012, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TL1T-0tJ9H4.

Gaboury, Jacob. “Elements of Vogue: A Conversation with Ultra-red.” Rhizome, 15 Dec. 2010, https://rhizome.org/editorial/2010/dec/15/elements-of-vogue-a-conversation-with-ultra-red/.

Gilbert, Alan. “ULTRA-RED.” Artforum, 27 Sep. 2023, https://www.artforum.com/columns/ultra-red-168609/.

Marquis, Joshua. “Listening Publics: Ultra-Red’s Protocols for the Common.” Canvas, 11 Jan. 2024, https://www.canvasjournal.ca/read/listening-publics-ultra-reds-protocols-for-the-common.

“Organized Listening: Sound Art, Collectivity and Politics | The New School.” Uploaded by The New School to YouTube, 23 Nov. 2010, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GZiJPrzCYKg.

System Failure, “A TRIBUTE TO ULTRA-RED AND MILITANT SOUND INVESTIGATION.” Internet Public Radio, 3 Sep. 2022, https://www.internetpublicradio.live/episodes/system-failure-9th-march-2022.

“Ultra-red.” Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions, https://welcometolace.org/lace/ultra-red.

“Ultra-red.” Precarity Pilot, precaritypilot.net/ultra-red/.

“VLC PRIZE NOMINEE – Ultra-red.” Vera List Center for Art and Politics, The New School, https://www.veralistcenter.org/network/ultra-red.

More Information

IMPORTANT: Profile pages for all collectives are in permanent development and have been built using information in the public domain. They will be updated progressively and in dialogue with the organizations by the end of 2024. New features and sections will be included in 2025, like featured videos, and additional featured projects. Please contact us if you discover errors. For more information on mapping criteria and to submit your organization’s information to be potentially included in the database, visit this page

Scroll to Top