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THUNDERGULCH
SPRING PRESENTATIONS BY ARTISTS WORKING IN DIGITAL
MEDIA
Thundergulch, the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council's
initiative devoted to arts and technology, announces its continuation of
salon-style presentations of works by artists working in digital media. An
evolution of the @ the wall series initiated at The New York Information
Technology Center, Thundergulch @ the Sony Wonder Technology Lab will showcase
artwork by six prominent NYC Internet artists.
Sony Wonder Technology
Lab's High Definition Theater 550 Madison Ave (main entrance is on 56th
Street, between Madison and Fifth Aves)
http://www.sonywondertechlab.com
Presentations begin @ 6:00
pm
Thursday, April 13 A NYC Sampling from Art
Entertainment Network (AEN)
Featuring Vivian Selbo, Natalie
Jeremijenko & Eric Zimmerman
Art Entertainment Network (AEN) is an
online exhibition of more than 40 Web-based artist projects that exploit the
convergence of media on the Internet in order to explode the boundaries
between art and entertainment -- and daily (online) life. AEN is a concept
portal curated by Steve Dietz, Director of New Media Initiatives at The Walker
Art Center, designed by Vivian Selbo. (http://aen.walkerart.org)
Vivian
Selbo is an artist and website designer with recent work including Killer @pp:
Its @ll t@lk!. In addition to designing AEN for Gallery 9, she recently
produced 16 Objects, Ready or Not, for Michael Craig-Martin, Conversations
with Contemporary Artists, and InterNyet for the Museum of Modern Art, New
York. During her tenure as interface director of ada'web, four projects,
including her own Vertical Blanking Interval, became part of the design
collection at the Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco.
Natalie
Jeremijenko is a design engineer and internationally renowned techno-artist.
Her work includes digital, electromechanical, and interactive systems in
addition to biotechnological work. Her sculptural science experiment, Tree
Logic, was displayed at the opening of MASS MoCA, North Adams, MA in Summer
1999. She has also been included in the Whitney Biennial '97, Documenta '97,
and ARS Electronic Prix '96. A forthcoming retrospective of her work at the
Museum of Contemporary Art in Australia is scheduled for -date--.
Eric
Zimmerman is an accomplished game designer, artist, and academic exploring the
emerging field of game design. His diverse activities made him one of
Interview Magazine's "30 to Watch" in 1999 and also one of International
Design Magazine's ID 40 (40 influential designers) in 2000. His current
digital projects include SiSSY FiGHT 2000 (http://www.sissyfight.com) and
STRAIN, which premiered at New York's Rotunda Gallery in 1999 and will be
released this year on the
Internet.
********************************************************************************************************************************************************* Thursday,
May 4 Thundergulch/World Views intersects with the Whitney
Biennial
Featuring Diane Ludin, Prema Murthy & John
Simon
Prema Murthy and Diane Ludin are the two recent Thundergulch
residents from Lower Manhattan Cultural Council's World Views residency
program, that takes place on the 91st floor of the World Trade Center. Prema
Murthy, as part of the Fakeshop artgroup, and John Simon are both exhibiting
in the "Internet" category of this year's Whitney Biennial.
(http://www.whitney.org)
Diane Ludin, an Internet artist, is in the
process of developing the work, Speed Economies: Broadcast Documents as part
of her residency in the World Views program. She is creating a net-specific
media collage, Genetic Response System: version 2.0, which is being
commissioned by Turbulence and launching in May. She is also included in the
group show, Tenacity, at The Swiss Institute, New York (March 24 - May 13).
Ludin has developed past works with Prema Murthy, both individually and with
Fakeshop.
Prema Murthy is an artist exploring online performance and
digital media in conjunction with performance and installation works in
physical space. Her individual pieces have included the web-based MIMIC (1997)
(http://www.thing.net/~mimic) and BindiGirl ( ) (1999), which was featured on
THETHING.BBS. Fakeshop, of which she is a core member, is both an ongoing
electronic arts project and a performance and installation series. In
conjunction with the Whitney Biennial, Fakeshop will produce a live event,
developed in collaboration with other digital artists, musicians, and
theorists.
John Simon is an artist who uses technology as a process
and a medium. He creates thought-provoking pieces that explore themes such as
color theory and time and is well known for his Java applet, Every Icon.
(http://www.interport.net/~jfsjr) In addition to his inclusion in the upcoming
Whitney Biennial, Simon's solo exhibition at Sandra Gering Gallery, New York
opens in mid-April. (http://www.sandrageringgallery.com)
********************************************************************************************************************************************************* ARTBYTE:
The Magazine of Digital Culture is a media sponsor of these presentations.
Through this collaboration, ARTBYTE hopes to bring together the creative
forces merging art and technology, reaching out to the artists, designers, and
others who are shaping the look and feel of the future. http://www.artbyte.com
********************************************************************************************************************************************************** Special
thanks to Sonder Wonder Technology Lab for hosting these
presentations.
Funding for Thundergulch is generously provided by
the Bell Atlantic Foundation, The Cowles Charitable Trust, Heathcote Art
Foundation, the May and Samuel Rudin Family Foundation, and the Andy Warhol
Foundation for the Visual Arts. This project is made possible, in part, with
public funds from the National Endowment for the Arts, the New York City
Department of Cultural Affairs, and the Electronic Media and Film Program and
the Media Arts Technical Assistance Fund of the New York State Council on the
Arts, a State Agency. Thundergulch is also grateful for past and in-kind
support from AT&T Foundation, Chase Manhattan Foundation, Harvestworks
Digital Media Arts, J.P. Morgan, the New York Information Technology Center,
Parsons School of Design Digital Design Department, the Port Authority of New
York and New Jersey, Rudin Management and
VOID. /smaller>/fontfamily> Thundergulch c/o Lower Manhattan
Cultural Council 5 World Trade Center, Suite 9235 New York, NY
10048 tel (212) 432-0900 fax (212) 432-3646 email:
tgulch@artswire.org http://www.thundergulch.org
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