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Category Archives: Events

Events November 16, 2010; 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm.
MIT Media Lab [E14], 6th Floor, Room 633, 75 Amherst Street, Cambridge, MA

ecoarttech_headshots2[Media Lab Map] Cary Peppermint and Leila Nadir cofounded ecoarttech in 2005 to explore convergent media, technology, and environments. Cary and Leila work interdisciplinarily, drawing on ideas and methodologies from digital studies, philosophy, literature, ecological science, critical/cultural studies, and art. For ecoarttech, the term “environment” does not refer only to nature or geographic spaces but rather to interwoven networks of biological, cultural, mental, and digital spaces. The health of each is indistinguishable from the health of others. As Gregory Bateson writes, the planet is part of humans’ “eco-mental system”: “if Lake Erie is driven insane [by pollution], its insanity is incorporated in the larger system of your thought and experience.”
ecoarttech_IHEcoarttech’s latest work, Indeterminate Hikes, is an Android app that guides users through the “wilderness” of urban spaces. The IH trail database directs hikers to a series of Scenic Vistas, where they have the opportunity to contemplate nature or wildness in a globalized, urban space and the overlapping terrains of psychological and environmental ecologies. Through the experience of taking a walk and slowing down in the city, Indeterminate Hikes seeks to cultivate the imagination of ecological and cultural sustainability in modern, networked environments.
ecoarttech_whitneyIn 2009, ecoarttech completed two internet-based works: Untitled Landscape #5, a commission for the Whitney Museum of American Art, which disrupted the digital “landscape” of the Museum’s homepage with fluctuating orbs of light created through online visitation data; and Eclipse, a New Radio and Performing Arts, Inc. commission for Turbulence.org, which explores simultaneously the U.S. myth of wilderness, the politics of ecological pollution, and the information “pollution” generated by social networking sites.
ecoarttech_erarLeila earned her Ph.D. in literature from Columbia University in 2009 and is currently Mellon Post-Doctoral Fellow in Environmental Humanities at Wellesley College. She has published scholarly essays on digital art, environmental studies, and American literature. Cary holds an M.F.A. from Syracuse University and is an assistant professor at Colgate University where he teaches courses in the theory and practice of digital art.

RECORDING OF THIS TALK:

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Events October 26, 2010; 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm.
MIT Media Lab [E14], 6th Floor, Room 633, 75 Amherst Street, Cambridge, MA

jane_prophet_portait_chris_webb[Media Lab Map] Jane Prophet, a renowned British visual artist, uses traditional and new media and materials to produce surprising and beautiful objects. Site-specific installations include Conductor, a flooded power station lit with 120 electro luminescent cables. Decoy and The Landscape Room combine images of real and simulated landscapes, and Model Landscapes uses rapid prototyping to make miniature trees from mathematical data. Prophet is the driving force in a number of internationally acclaimed projects that break new ground in art, technology and science. Her collaborations with stem cell researchers, mathematicians and heart surgeons radically re-envisage the human body. In 2005 she won a National Endowment for Science, Technology and the Arts Fellowship to develop interdisciplinary artworks like Net Work (comprising hundreds of illuminated buoys) and Big Plastic Tree (an artwork built by robots). She has worked with digital media for two decades and currently focuses on the physicalisation of data: making real 3D objects. She is Professor of Art, Interdisciplinary Computing at Goldsmiths, London.

“Most of my art works, in whatever media, are influenced by my concerns with the physical structure of objects (the growth structure of trees, the shape of the human heart, the particular spatial qualities of a building). I’m equally interested in the way that these familiar objects and places feature in our social and economic landscape: how we use them as symbols (the oak tree becomes shorthand for “Englishness”; the heart symbolises “Love”; landmark buildings both past and present are presented as signs of affluence, regeneration and “Progress”). The third underlying element in most of my works is a curiosity about new materials, new technologies and new engineering processes.

jane_prophet_silver hearts_row

In the past, drawing on the interests outlined, I have made works such as The Landscape Room, and Decoy, both of which analyse and re-present the structure of the English oak, and of the English landscape. Both these works utilise bespoke computer programming and fractal mathematics from which I ‘grow’ virtual trees and change the appearance of hitherto familiar National Trust parklands.

Model Landscapes, extends this theme by moving from two-dimensional still images and animations, to produce a series of vignettes. The Model Landscape vignettes are “model” in terms of being “ideal” and at the same time, “scaled-down”. To make these works, I used a combination of old and new media, combining rapid prototyping techniques, whereby I took my own three-dimensional computer data and made small trees from the fractal mathematics, to hand-cut books, where tree structures popped up from the pages.

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Souvenir of England references our Englishness and the nostalgia we sometimes feel for the loss of native flora and fauna due to changes in agricultural policy and practices and climate change.”

Events September 28, 2010; 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm.
Lecture Hall 6th Floor, Room 633, MIT Media Lab, 75 Amherst Street, Cambridge, MA

Rozin Circles Mirror 2005_285[Image: Daniel Rozin "Circles Mirror" 2005] Spectral Analogies: Casey Reas and the Art of Programming. A talk by Meredith Hoy hosted by the MIT Media Lab.

Abstract: Incorporating the work of Daniel Rozin, Casey Reas, and Sol LeWitt, Spectral Analogies places the notion of the digital in an expanded field, framing it as a mechanism, a process, and a constructive method that operates well beyond the boundaries of computational technology. Taking as its starting point the hypothesis that “the digital” is a term that most often refers to a technological milieu rather than an aesthetic category, this talk addresses some of the features that identify the sensorially apprehensible, aesthetic characteristics of digitality. It argues that the digital as an aesthetic category can be disaggregated from computational technology, such that digital features are observable in artworks and artifacts that pre-exist the invention of computers by decades or even centuries. Whereas some computationally generated or aided pictures, such as the photographs of Jeff Wall, obscure their digital configuration, this talk will focus on examples of contemporary computational artworks that foreground the aesthetic category of the digital as I have defined it. An artifact whose digital structure is visible on its surface speaks, in a visual language with its own distinct syntax, about the relationship between surface and infrastructure, representation and technology. This talk seeks to open the notion of the digital to renegotiation and renewed interrogation, and to create the possibility of a new conversation between contemporary media arts and art of both the recent and deep past.

Reas Process 14 2006_485[Image: Casey Reas "Process 14" 2006]

meredithMeredith Hoy is Assistant Professor of Contemporary Art in the Department of Art and Art History at the University of Massachusetts, Boston. She received her Ph.D. from the University of California at Berkeley in 2010. Her dissertation, entitled From Point to Pixel: A Genealogy of Digital Aesthetics, traces links between contemporary digital art and modern painting. Drawing on theories of visuality, space and spatial practice, cybernetics and systems theory, phenomenology, and post-structuralism and semiotics, her research focuses on the impact of technology on art and visual culture. She has written on modern and contemporary art and architecture, generative art, information visualization, and the phenomenology of networked space.

Events May 4, 2010; 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm.
ACT - MIT Program in Art, Culture and Technology, 265 Massachusetts Avenue, 3rd Floor, Room N51-390, Cambridge, MA.

portraitRichardTheRichard The is a graphic and interaction designer. After studying at University of the Arts Berlin and working at Sagmeister Inc., he is now working at the MIT Media Lab with Prof. David Small, and is part of the design studio The Green Eyl in Berlin. Richard focuses on new forms of visual expression that utilize computation, and design for new social interactions and situations. His work has been shown at Ars Electronica, Design Museum London and Experimenta Design Amsterdam. He is the recipient of numerous awards, including Honorary Mention at Ars Electronica, London Designs of the Year, Tokyo Type Director’s Club. Richard’s projects include:

The Whispering Table where one can explore similarities and peculiarities of different food ceremonies playfully. Four unique festivities celebrated by people of different cultures are assembled at a round table creating an archetypical scene of congregation.

richard_the_appeelAppeel is a virus spread by interacting individuals. Surfaces are covered by thousands of coloured stickers laid out in a grid. Peeling a sticker off leaves a white spot in the grid, people hence start individually and collectively changing its appearance. Once off the wall, the stickers ask to be sticked somewhere: people begin putting them on objects, walls, people, they collect them, they compose new images, they write messages. Slowly the little stickers spread, appearing further away from their source and occupying space.

Appeel inherits basic principles of interactivity and generativity applied to purely analogous means. Its immanent potential of penetrating regulated public and private space counterpoints its apparent plainness. The dot spreads with the promise to ironically mark its carrier as a symbol of sale and possession.

Events April 6, 2010; 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm.
ACT - MIT Program in Art, Culture and Technology, 265 Massachusetts Avenue, 3rd Floor, Room N51-390, Cambridge, MA.

Digital media artist Jane D. Marsching will weave together an evening of storytelling, dancing, and conversation as part of her talk about recent projects that seek to translate abstract climate data and depressing climate news into sensory experiences.

marsching
Still from All my Vows, 2009; 3 minute video

Jane D. Marsching explores our past, present and future human impact on the environment through interdisciplinary and collaborative practices, including video installations, virtual landscapes, dynamic websites, and data visualizations.

Recent exhibitions include: the ICA Boston; MassMoCA; North Carolina Museum of Art; San Jose Museum of Art, CA; Photographic Resource Center, Boston, MA; and Sonoma Museum of Art, CA. She has received grants from Creative Capital, LEF Foundation, Artadia and Artists Resource Trust.

Recent publications include: BiPolar (Cornerhouse 2008), Gothic (Whitechapel Press, London, 2008), and S&F Online: Gender on Ice (Barnard College, 2008.

With Mark Alice Durant in 2005, she curated The Blur of the Otherworldly: Contemporary Art, Technology, and the Paranormal, at The Center for Art and Visual Culture, Baltimore, MD; a catalog of the exhibition was published in June 2006 with essays by Marsching, Durant, Marina Warner and Lynne Tillman.

Jane is a cofounder and member of Platform2: Art and Activism, an experimental forum series about creative practices at the intersection of social issues. She is currently Associate Professor at Massachusetts College of Art in Studio Foundation. She received her MFA in photography from The School of Visual Arts, New York City, in 1995.

Image of the event:
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