TRANSMISSION ART ARCHIVE
Marjorie Van Halteren
Marjorie Van Halteren was born in Detroit, Michigan, graduating from the University of Michigan in Speech and Theatre, later completing an MA in performance studies from NYU. She lived in New York for the first part of her adult life, where she was a radio producer as an independent and for WNYC New York Public Radio. She shared in three Peabody Awards for her work in creative documentary and live radio, and as the Artistic Director of The Radio Stage, she commissioned and produced a dozen original plays from New York playwrights. Her work has appeared on Radiophenia, Glasgow, BBC Radio 3 and 4, WDR, Radio Netherlands, NPR and Studio 360 in the US. She has lived in the North of France since 1992, and is a member of Muzzix collective in Lille, France. She records, composes, sings, and plays electronic instruments and objects, solo, as well as in collaboration with other musicians and performers. Her latest solo piece is “Can’t Draw, Can’t Paint.”
The Electroacoustical Poetical Society (EAPS) is the invention of Marjorie Van Halteren. EAPS is a group of six sound poets (four in the US, two in Europe) that agree on a single “prompt,” each then making an individual work in response. Marjorie describes its purpose as “promoting the magic that words, voices, languages, instruments, noises and all manner of sounds make together, written, improvised or dreamed – in defiance of genres and categories…words, sounds, silences, thoughts on equal footing.”

