Brian Routh

Brian Routh (9 March 1948) is a British performance and sound artist. He is known for his performance work with Martin von Haselberg as one of The Kipper Kids who became notorious for their rowdy and rebellious performances in the art world; influencing the punk movement and the inspiration for such acts as Blue Man Group, Karen Finley and Paul McCarthy. The Kipper Kids performed throughout Europe, North Africa, United Kingdom, North America and Canada. They also worked on a number of projects for HBO and Cinemax as well as cameos in various movies. In addition to the Kipper Kids, Brian has performed as a solo act and collaborated with other performers and artists. He produced sound art which consists of video performance and sound works that have been featured in museums, galleries, television and on radio.

Brian Routh
Born(1948-03-09)9 March 1948
Gateshead, County Durham, England, UK
Occupation(s)Performance artist, sound artist
Years active1972–2018
Spouses

Life and family

Born in Gateshead, County Durham, Routh grew up in a working-class family with parents that were considered rebellious talkers and storytellers. Routh's great-grandfather James Diston was a bare-knuckle prize fighter who also ran a circus. Routh attended the Bifron's Secondary Modern School in Barking, Essex, graduating in 1963. In Routh's youth, he participated in boxing, poetry and singing. He learned to play the piano, harmonium, organ, and later the drums. Routh played in a rock group as a drummer in the early 1960s and later performed as a singer/guitarist. He attended East 15 Acting School where he met fellow student Martin von Haselberg. They became good friends, and together they created The Kipper Kids. They performed in small theatres, clubs and festivals in the Netherlands, Germany, Italy and Austria. They received an invitation to perform at the Munich Olympics as the Kipper Kids in 1972, which was marred by the Munich massacre.[1]

Brian Routh was married to new media artist Nina Sobell from 1975 to 1981. Routh had taught at the San Francisco Art Institute where he met Karen Finley. They were married in 1981, which ended in divorce in 1987. Since 2009, Routh was partnered with digital artist Patricia Wells and they were married in 2012.[2][3]

Routh lived in Leicester.[4][5]

Performance artist

Routh started his career in 1971 as a performance artist. After inventing the character of Harry Kipper with Martin Von Haselberg on an acid trip in Frankfurt, they developed the iconic Kipper Kids.[6] Routh embarked on solo work primarily in the mid-1970s. Von Haselberg and Routh reunited in 1977 to appear as the Kipper Kids in a film by Richard Elfman called Forbidden Zone, which was released in 1982.[7] In 1980 Routh began to perform as a solo artist again in between Kipper Kids appearances. He performed at Lincoln Center in New York City, as well as theatre festivals in Germany, Italy and at the Art Cologne. In 1982 The Kipper Kids were cast in a unique variety show promoted by HBO, entitled "The Mondo Beyondo Show", featuring and hosted by Bette Midler. Routh was also involved in writing and starring in three projects for HBO and Cinemax, and he performed in several films alongside Van Haselberg as The Kipper Kids.[8]

Collaborations

Routh has collaborated with and appeared with: The Kipper Kids; the Blue Man Group; Nina Sobell; Karen Finley (a 1981 tour of Italy and Germany); Henry Rollins (in Arizona, 1987); Public Image Ltd; Genesis P-Orridge; Sex Pistols (at Reading University, 1975); Johanna Went (at the Theatre Carnival); Sequel Cafe LA USA; Eric Bogosian; Anne Bean; Bow Gamelan Ensemble; Lol Coxhill; Evan Parker; Derek Bailey; Ian Hinchliffe.

Filmography and television

YearMovie-Television Show
1991 The Addams Family
Spirit of '76
1990 Mum's Magic Mulch
1989 Moonlighting
1988 UHF
Mondo Beyondo
K.O. Kippers
1981 Theatre in Trance – Rainer Werner Fassbinde
No Holds Barre
1980 Forbidden Zone
1979 Dress Rehearsal-Werner Schroeter
1977 & 1978 Chuck Barris Rah-Rah Show

2000–2018

Routh worked primarily within the sound art genre on a variety of pieces combining video, performance and sound in the form of diaries, rants and sound works. He was also involved in activism and uses notable speakers, sampling their speeches and re-editing them to music he designed for the piece.[9] His sound work has been featured on numerous BBC Radio shows and The Guardian weekly podcast.

References

  1. Ex Gateshead Schoolboy goes to Olympic Games to Act, Gateshead Post, published 18 August 1972
  2. Artist Patricia Wells, retrieved 20 September 2011
  3. Brian Routh Bio on vimeo. Retrieved 20 September 2011
  4. On Edge: Performance at the End of the Twentieth Century; Carr, C.
  5. California Video: Artists and Histories; Los Angeles The Getty Research Institute, The J. Paul Getty Museum, edited by Glenn Phillips.
  6. "Brian Routh: Flavors.me". Archived from the original on 18 August 2011. Retrieved 29 August 2011.
  7. Brian Routh (The Kipper Kids) appearance in the Forbidden Zone Archived 29 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine, retrieved 6 November 2011
  8. Kipper Kids Seek a K.O. on Cinemax 31 July 1988, by Lawrence Christon, retrieved 28 September 2011
  9. Interview with Brian Routh, written 26 March 2011 Janestown.net. Retrieved 16 January 2012
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