André Éric Létourneau, born on September twenty-fifth, nineteen sixty-seven, is a distinguished French Canadian media and transmedia artist, composer, and professor. Based primarily in Montreal and Saint-Alphonse-Rodriguez, Québec, he has made significant contributions to the realms of performance art, radio art, process art, sound poetry, and experimental music. Létourneau is known for his innovative use of pseudonyms, most notably Benjamin Muon and algojo)(algojo.
Since the nineteen eighties, Létourneau has showcased his intermedia works at prestigious international performance art festivals, galleries, and museums. His notable exhibitions include the Walter Phillips Gallery at the Banff Centre in nineteen ninety-two, the James H.W. Thompson Foundation in Bangkok in two thousand six, and the Pointe-à-Callière Museum in Montreal as part of Les Escales Improbables in two thousand seven. In two thousand six, he represented Canada at the XVth Biennale de Paris under a pseudonym.
His artistic endeavors extend to radio art, where he produced several projects and music compositions for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC). A highlight of his career was serving as the producer for a special Hörspiel broadcast on the night of December thirty-first, nineteen ninety-nine, marking the transition to the new millennium. Another significant work,