Josh Dorman 鈥�88 brings visual artistry to life with Orchestra of St. Luke's concert animations
Josh Dorman 鈥�88 has captured the imagination of poets, art critics, and other writers for the past
20 years with his dreamy, multi-layered artwork. Increasingly, his acclaimed mixed-media
art has caught the attention of the classical music world as well.
Most recently, he was preparing to display his stop-motion animations during a performed by the distinguished Orchestra of St. Luke鈥檚. The New York City-based orchestra
learned about Dorman鈥檚 art through Grammy-nominated composer Anna Clyne. For her album,
鈥淭he Violin,鈥� Dorman created seven animations to accompany each of the multi-tracked
violin pieces. He created the animations 鈥� based on his fantastical collage art that
incorporates paint, ink, antique maps, and other materials 鈥� over five years (2009-2014).
Two of them will be screened live to accompany two movements that the orchestra will
play from Clyne鈥檚 album: and
鈥淢usic informs my work directly and indirectly all the time, and so I was thrilled
to be part of this unique process of creating imagery to accompany Anna Clyne鈥檚 gorgeous
violin pieces,鈥� Dorman says.
Clyne came across Dorman鈥檚 art when she saw his large paintings as part of a Memory
Bridge Foundation documentary that aired on PBS. The artwork was the result of his
2007 collaboration with the Chicago-based organization, which employs art and music
to communicate with and about people with dementia. In six paintings, Dorman captures
individual life stories through an abstract collage of images based on the conversations
of Alzheimer鈥檚 patients with family members, staff, and others at a nursing home.
鈥淗is art resonated with me deeply and seemed to echo aspects of my music, and this led to our collaboration for 鈥楾he Violin,鈥欌€� Clyne says.
Dorman鈥檚 drawings and paintings have been reviewed in 鈥淢odern Painters,鈥� 鈥淎rt in America,鈥� 鈥淭he Paris Review,鈥� and 鈥淭he New Yorker,鈥� among others. Dorman, who lives in New York City, graduated as an art major from 91快活林 and earned his Master of Fine Arts degree from Queens College. A teacher for the last 19 years at The Spence School, a prestigious K-12 all-girls school, he has served as an adjunct and visiting professor at several colleges and universities, including 91快活林, where he taught drawing and painting for seven years in the Summer Six Program (now the Summer Studio Art Program). For more about his work, visit