Laurie Anderson

2026 Kyoto Prize Laureates

Arts and Philosophy

Music

Laurie Anderson

/  Multimedia Artist

1947-

Achievement Digest

An Artist Who Has Established a Unique Form of Multimedia Performance by Deploying Electronic Media to Fuse Experimental and Pop Sounds with Her Voice and Body

Laurie Anderson has demonstrated her interdisciplinary creativity beyond the boundaries of music, visual art, and film through her innovative use of technology, combining ingenuity and wit. She has established a uniquely experimental yet pop-infused form of multimedia performance by integrating her own narrative voice, body, and electronic media.

Achievement

Laurie Anderson has demonstrated her interdisciplinary creativity beyond the boundaries of music, visual art, and film through her innovative use of technology. Utilizing inventive ideas, physicality, and wit, she has established a unique form of multimedia performance that incorporates a variety of electronic media.

Anderson found her voice as a performance artist in the 1970s, under the influence of New York City’s contemporary art and music scenes, as well as the punk and new wave movements. After the unexpected success of her 1981 single “O Superman,” which featured an extremely simple loop of her own voice processed into a synthetic sound, she released her major-label debut album, Big Science, in 1982, bringing her to the attention of the pop music market as well. In 1983, she premiered her monumental, eight-hour performance piece, United States I-IV. She became a key figure in the flourishing performance art scene of the 1980s, which blended physical expression with video, sound, and other elements. Anderson acted a mediator between avant-garde art and popular music, collaborating with beat writer William S. Burroughs, media artist Nam June Paik, composer Philip Glass, and her partner, musician Lou Reed.

Anderson’s performances integrate her own narrative voice, body, and electronic media, and her experimental yet pop-infused approach has influenced countless artists. Her work includes critical commentaries on media, science, and technology, as well as expressions that challenge existing notions of gender through the integration of androgynous costumes and technical manipulations, such as electronically altering her voice pitch to sound like a man’s. Furthermore, many of the instruments and devices used in her performances are her own inventions and creations that have played a pivotal role in redefining the relationship between the visual and the aural.

Anderson’s more recent work continues to engage with cutting-edge media. After being selected as the first Artist-in-Residence at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration in 2002, she drew on this experience to create the 2004 performance piece The End of the Moon. In 2019, she collaborated with new media creator Hsin-Chien Huang to present the virtual reality work To the Moon. Above all, she continues to inspire people globally with her uniquely narrative musical works, such as the 2018 album Landfall, created in collaboration with the Kronos Quartet and inspired by her experiences during Hurricane Sandy, and the 2024 album Amelia, which explores the final flight of aviator Amelia Earhart.

Profile

Biography
1947
Born in Chicago, Illinois, U.S.A.
1969
B.A. in Art History, Barnard College
1972
M.F.A. in Sculpture, Columbia University
 
Began presenting performance works
1978
Performed with Julia Heyward at The Nova Convention
1981
Released O Superman, which led to number two on the British pop charts
2002
Became the first artist-in-residence of NASA
2021
Delivered the Charles Eliot Norton Lectures at Harvard University
Selected Awards and Honors
2007
The Dorothy and Lillian Gish Prize
2017
Wolf Prize in Arts
2022
Visionary Pioneers of Media Art, Prix Ars Electronica
2024
Lifetime Achievement Award, Grammy Award
Gold Medal for Music, American Academy of Arts and Letters
Selected Works
1982
Big Science (album)
1983
United States I-IV (performance)
1986
Home Of The Brave (film)
1990
Empty Places (performance)
1995
The Nerve Bible (performance)
1999
Songs and Stories from Moby Dick (performance)
2001
Life on a String (album)
2004
The End of the Moon (performance)
2010
Homeland (album)
2018
Landfall (with Kronos Quartet) (album)
2019
To the Moon (with Huang Hsin-Chien) (virtual reality)
2024
ARK: United States Part V (performance)
Amelia (album)

Profile is at the time of the award.