LUMONICS CONTINUES TO LIGHT UP DENVER WITH ITS IMMERSIVE ART EXPERIENCE

Colorado Matters Interview with Dorothy Tanner (2015)

How Triptic came into this world

Tryptic by Dorothy Tanner (1998)

In the mid-1970s, 2 students from Miami Beach High School, David Chesky and Bill Borkan, came to Lumonics after school one day to introduce themselves.  I thought of them as whiz kids.

David played a Mini-Moog Synthesizer, and soon after we met him, composed some music for one of our Lumonics performances. He went on to become a composer of avant-garde music in New York City, founded   an ensemble,  and the record company he started,  Chesky Record is still going strong. We are still in touch with David.

Bill loved electronics and music, and was a  radio DJ for a popular jazz station in Miami while still in high school. Bill was totally devoted to his younger sister, Jenny, who had cerebral palsy.  He asked us to made a sandwich holder for Jenny which made eating so much easier for her. After all, acrylic glass (plexiglass) was and is an industrial material before artists discovered it, and you can make many “practical” things with it. 

We lost track of both of them, and we left South Florida for quite a few years.  After we lived in San Diego, Bangor, Maine, and Boston, we returned to Fort Lauderdale rather than Miami.

A few years after Mel Tanner died (1993), Bill surprised us with a visit. We had a lot of catching up to do!
He told us he graduated from  Carnegie-Mellon, and invented a device to benefit his sister that would send an electrical signal to relax the spine . It was so effective that it was used in hospitals all over the world. He became very wealthy.

Bill commissioned Dorothy to create a large lighted wall sculpture for his new home. Dorothy told him that she works with external lighting, and he should select one of Mel’s wall pieces. He was emphatic that he wanted Dorothy to create it The result was  a triptych, named Triptic,  which was 10′ high and 24′ wide.

Prior to this, Dorothy had not created an internally lighted sculpture, not wanting to do the same thing as Mel, although they did collaborate. 

We had a lot of plans with Bill as it was so good to be in touch again. He spent a good part of the year in Hawaii and had a small shopping center with a theater that he wanted us to get involved with.

Out of the blue, he had a heart attack and died. We found out recently that Jennie is now 57.

Since Triptic was made, Dorothy has created many internally lighted sculptures, both free-standing and wall sculptures.

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