Sabrina Ratté & Roger Tellier-CraigCA/QC
Sabrina Ratté is a Montréal-based artist whose practice blends 3D scans, analog video synthesizers, and digital animation to construct immersive ecosystems. Her work spans installations, videos, sculptures, and virtual reality, exploring the speculative evolution of environments shaped by the convergence of technology and biology. Influenced by science fiction, philosophy, and myth, Ratté envisions post-human landscapes where materiality and virtuality merge. Her work has been shown at the Centre Pompidou, Laforet Museum, PHI Centre, and the Museum of the Moving Image, with solo exhibitions at Gaîté Lyrique, Fotografiska, and Arsenal Contemporary Art. She is part of the MAC Montréal’s collection.
Roger Tellier-Craig is a Montréal-based composer whose work explores the tension between reality and its simulations. A founding member of influential groups like Fly Pan Am, Set Fire to Flames, and Le Révélateur (with Sabrina Ratté), his sonic explorations span experimental rock, electroacoustic composition, and audiovisual art. His music has been released on renowned labels including Constellation, Alien8, and FatCat, and he has toured internationally. Tellier-Craig also composes for film, theatre, and dance, collaborating with artists such as Denis Côté, Dana Gingras, and Karl Lemieux. His electroacoustic works have earned accolades from the Canadian Electroacoustic Community.
Sabrina Ratté & Roger Tellier-Craig — Cyberdelia
Live A/V
In Cyberdelia, Sabrina Ratté and Roger Tellier-Craig merge sonic architecture and AI-driven visuals into a shifting mindscape. Echoing 90s cyberculture, this live performance probes the psyche-machine interface, revealing mesmerizing and disquieting visions of a techno-future haunted by the Anthropocene.
Who
Sabrina Ratté and Roger Tellier-Craig form an audiovisual duo creating immersive worlds at the intersection of analog video, digital animation, and electroacoustic composition.
Latest
Roger Tellier-Craig — Horizons pavés (2021)
More
Cyberdelia was presented as an installation last winter at the Society for Arts and Technology.