Ana Voog | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Born | 18 April 1966 |
Genres | Pop rock, experimental pop |
Occupation(s) | Singer-songwriter, musician, performance artist, visual artist, writer, hypnotist and mother |
Instrument(s) | Guitar, bass, keyboard, vocals |
Years active | 1986–present |
Website | anavoog |
Ana Clara Voog (born 18 April 1966)[1] is a musician, visual artist, performance artist and writer from Minneapolis, Minnesota.[2] Voog is the former front woman of The Blue Up?,[3] a pop rock band from the Minneapolis area.[4] On 22 August 1997[5] Voog began anacam, one of the first webcams (inspired by JenniCam) that lifecasted, i.e., broadcast twenty-four hours a day live from a home.[6] In her own words anacam was "the internet's 1st 24/7 art+life cam!"[7]
Early life
Voog was born under a different name to a Lutheran minister father.[8] She later changed her name to Ana Clara Voog. Voog attended high school in Stillwater, Minnesota.
Musical career
Before her fame as a 1990s pop culture phenomenon, a musical-visual-word artist, and one of the first internet media artists, she had local success as the frontwoman of the Minneapolis experimental pop band The Blue Up? the first all-female rock band from Minnesota. She released an EP called Now and a single called "We are the Garden". In 1995 she released a record on Columbia Records. Ms Voog was signed by David Kahne, who has produced records for famous household names like Paul McCartney or The Bangles. Before that the band was under contract with Midnight Music Records (a fairly big independent record company at the time in the 1980s). Her first full length record, Introducing Sorrow, a concept record, was never released because the owner, Nick Ralph, disappeared mysteriously. It is still waiting to be released.
After the group disbanded in 1996, she signed onto Radioactive/Wasteland Records (MCA) with support from Prince and the Revolution drummer Bobby Z who then became her manager. Recordings at Paisley Park followed in collaboration with musicians David Sylvian and Ingrid Chavez on the track 'I was waving at you'. David Sylvian on his contribution:
"The collaboration was primarily between Ingrid and Ana. They created a spoken word piece and were in something of a rush for a complementary backing track due to an urgent completion date. Budget problems I believe. Ana asked if I could come up with something. I did. More sound collage than composition if I remember correctly. The album was shelved for a couple of years but I understand it’s now due to be released. We haven’t heard the final results but wish her well with the project."[9]
In 1995 her record was released on Columbia Records. Voog was signed by Grammy award winner David Kahne, who has produced records for famous household names like Paul McCartney or The Bangles. After Voog left Columbia she recorded anavoog.com.
Due to the inherent misogyny she found in the industry Voog left the business and went on to do anacam.
The name of the record “Cake and Eat It” was the muse to Courtney love's famous line.
On YouTube there is a video featuring John Peel announcing Come Alive by The Blue Up? John Peelś Blue Up?.
The anacam years
On 22 August 1997, Voog began a webcam project named anacam. Besides a view into Voog's personal life, anacam also incorporated performance art and visual experimentation. Daily activities such as cooking dinner, vacuuming, and hosting visitors fill out the non-interactive periods on anacam. Other activities on the webcam range from chatting with cam-watchers, playing music, and ornate performance pieces involving household items.
While sex and nudity played only a small part in what could be seen on cam, Voog gained considerable attention, and criticism, for the portrayal of nudity and sexual activity[10] on her live webcam.
Voog distinguished the racier elements of her project from pornography, stating that the "site isn't about sex, but sexuality and SENSUALITY..."[10] In contrast with one-time collaborator Isabellacam, which was self-described as "a completely original take on female produced erotic content", Voog views sexuality on anacam as a part of her life, as she describes in the rest of the quotation: "...is a PART of this site because that is part of my life."
From the beginning of anacam, Voog accompanied the webcam with a blog in a section of her site, analog and in her LiveJournal, started in 2000.[11] Voog transcribed her earlier, hand-written journals to her online blog.[12] She expresses herself in many forms of writing. Voog also produced many varieties of art, including video, paintings, drawings, and photographs.[13] Since 1998 the most prolific part of her work was done in so-called "anagrams".
On anacam.com a whole section of the site called anapix was dedicated to pictures created by users using Voogs work.
In May 2002,[14] Voog began to freeform crochet hats. Each is unique, and she sells them via her website.
On Voog's online work, Jorn Barger, who is credited with coining the word weblog,[15][16] states:
- She was trying to live her life 100 per cent openly, which I thought was a righteous ideal. I wanted to emulate it in my own way by logging everything I found interesting, whether art or politics or silliness or even occasionally good porn.[15]
A number of newspapers and magazines have written about Voog and anacam, including Newsweek, USA Today, Playboy, and Yahoo! Internet Life.
Television appearances include Hard Copy, Vibe, A&E, Net Cafe,[17] and E!. She also appeared on an episode of the early "video blog" by Jennifer Ringley of Jennicam.[18]
Voog conducted an Interview with Tori Amos on Nov 20th 1999. On her site she documented the encounter[19] and wrote:
"november 18th, 1999 at 7pm was the unveiling of tori amos' new official website, www.toriamos.com! to go along with the grand opening, they showed the premiere of a conversation i had with tori amos in NYC on october 20th, 1999that u could see and hear on streaming vid. it's was 1/2 an hour long ( edited down from an hour ) and i think it turned out very well! if you want to know how on earth i got to be so lucky, go read my tori stories below! :) yay :)"
Voog has repeatedly tried to rectify the idea her appearance on webcam and other public ventures were and are expressed via a 'persona.' "i do not like to censor. i do not have a public persona. what you see is what you get."[20] This has proven to be near impossible (Example[21]).
In August 2009, Voog turned off her webcam on the 12th anniversary of the site. In total, anacam broadcast live, 24/7, for twelve years.[22]
A number of public archives of Voog's work have fallen into serious disrepair, although a representative selection has been published in J.D. Casten's book on Voog, Dreaming on Stage. Since Voog lost her original "anacam.com" domain to a Cybersquatter some years after the end of her lifecast her original content (in a state of disrepair due to no longer functioning Hard links) was moved in Mid 2019 to anavoog.com and is generally usable again (though without live picture updates). Repairs are ongoing.
Since the end of anacam Voog has continued tho be active on social media and as a video artist, while raising her children. In 2019 she learned to be a hypnotist, but as of end of 2020 had, due to the pandemic, had no possibility yet to work in that field.
Video work
Most of her work with video can be seen on her Vimeo account[23] or her Instagram account.[24]
Photography and other visual artwork
During her whole career Voog painted, did artistic photography and artwork often based on photography or pictures from anacam. Parts of this work can be seen on her website. Art installations by Voog have been hosted by the New York City Museum of Modern Art, and in the Walker Art Center and the Weisman Art Museum. She also sells her visual artwork.
Writing
Voog published and still publishes poetry, stream-of-consciousness work, along with other writings.[25] She is an avid writer of "anagrams, collections of text, links, art, music, the extraordinary and the mundane.,[26] a kind of blog that often takes the possibilities of the form to the limit.
Personal life
On 30 July 2007, she had her first child,[27] which was conceived and birthed on cam.
In 2020 she became a hypnotist and is now (2021) an astrologer.
She states that in Human Design her profile is 2/45, the hermit heretic. She there is also quad right RAX Cross of Laws. In the Myers Briggs test she is an INFJ. Her birth information is April 18, 1966 11:56 am, Saint Paul, Minnesota.
Voog, despite her fame among some users of the internet, discusses in her work that she is an introvert who had to overcome adversity all her life (she talks about that in her anagrams and analogs).
Awards
In 1999 Voog received 2 Minnesota Music Awards for Best Electronic Music and Best Electronic Recording (anavoog.com).
In 2000 she received 2 [South by Southwest] awards for Best Webcam and the Peoples Choice Award.
Discography
Recordings by The Blue Up?
- "We are the Garden" b/w "It's My Life" (first single, 1986: vinyl)
- Now (EP 1987: vinyl; German version, 1988)
- "Everything Is" (on Kaleidoscope – Exploding Underground Compilation, 1988: vinyl)
- "Were You a Friend?" (on Let's Talk About Boys – German compilation 1988: vinyl)
- Introducing Sorrow (1989; was to be released by Midnight Music London, but they went bankrupt. Was then released in mp3 format in ana2.com, May 1999)
- Cake and Eat It (1992: CD and cassette)
- "Pink Turns to Blue" (on Du Huskers – Hüsker Dü tribute album, 1993: vinyl, CD, and cassette)
- "Breathe You Out" (1995: CD single)
- "Breathe You Out" (on Soundbites – compilation, 1995: cassette)
- Spool Forka Dish (1995: promo cassette)
- Spool Forka Dish (1995), mixed by Grammy award winner Michael Brauer
- "Frovarp" (on Minnesota Modern Rock – compilation, 1995)
Solo recordings
- Mother Anorexia (demo) (on Radioactive – compilation, 1996)
- Telepathic You & Please God (on Radioactive – compilation, 1997)
- Please God (1997: promo CD)
- Anavoog.com (promo CD)
- Four remixes
- AnaVoog.com (1998) (on Hollywood Remixes, 1998: vinyl)
References
- ↑ biography on anacam
- ↑ Ana Voog Biography on IMDb, retrieved 23 January 2009
- ↑ Steltenpohl, Jon, Rachael of The Blue Up? Interview, archived from the original on 13 April 2009, retrieved 23 January 2009
- ↑ Scholtes, Peter S. (18 September 2002), The City Pages, archived from the original on 2 January 2008, retrieved 23 January 2009
- ↑ Voog, Ana (22 August 2008), trance missions – 11 years, archived from the original on 25 December 2009, retrieved 23 January 2009
- ↑ Anacam, retrieved 21 July 2006
- ↑ "Anatomy". anavoog.com. Retrieved 14 September 2020.
- ↑ Voog, Ana (31 August 2007), trance missions, archived from the original on 29 September 2011, retrieved 23 January 2009
- ↑ Sylvian, David (16 February 2015). "David Sylvian on his contribution". davidsylvian.net. Retrieved 29 November 2020.
- 1 2 Voog, Ana (5 December 2020), Anacan Anatomy
- ↑ "ana - Profile". ana.livejournal.com. Retrieved 14 September 2020.
- ↑ "analog menu". anavoog.com. Retrieved 14 September 2020.
- ↑ Ana Voog and a Robot Dancing Together, archived from the original on 14 April 2009, retrieved 23 January 2009
- ↑ Voog, Ana (22 May 2002), voog hat bio, archived from the original on 16 February 2009, retrieved 23 January 2009
- 1 2 Silkstone, Dan (7 April 2007), "The blogs that ate cyberspace", The Age, Melbourne, retrieved 23 January 2009
- ↑ Barger, Jorn (15 December 2007), "Top 10 Tips for New Bloggers From Original Blogger Jorn Barger", Wired, retrieved 23 January 2009
- ↑ Voyeurism Online, 28 June 2000, retrieved 2 February 2009
- ↑ JenniShow Episode 32: JenniCon, 17 June 2006, archived from the original on 5 January 2009, retrieved 2 February 2009
- ↑ Voog, Ana Clara (1 December 2020), Tori Amos interview, retrieved 1 December 2020
- ↑ Voog, Ana. "artist statement". mnartists. Retrieved 10 November 2020.
- ↑ Graham, Neile. "ana voog". The Ectophiles' Guide to Good Music. Neile Graham. Retrieved 10 November 2020.
Ana Voog's current focus seems to be on the presentation of a public persona—a kind of performance art.
- ↑ anacam's 12th ana-versary!, 22 August 2009, archived from the original on 18 August 2011, retrieved 12 February 2010
- ↑ Voog, Ana. "ana voog on Vimeo".
- ↑ Voog, Ana. "ana voog on Instagram".
- ↑ Voog, Ana, Ana Voog Weblog, archived from the original on 9 May 2008, retrieved 23 January 2009
- ↑ "anavoog". anavoog.com. Retrieved 14 September 2020.
- ↑ Voog, Ana (31 July 2007), trance missions – July 31st, 2007, archived from the original on 30 November 2012, retrieved 31 January 2009