March 2006

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Recent Posts


February 04, 2006

CORY ARCANGEL, Computer Artist

MYERS ARTIST IN RESIDENCE
LECTURE: "How I Went from Modifying Nintendo Games
to Giving Lectures About Simon & Garfunkel"
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2006 - 6pm

Cory Arcangel is a computer artist whose work is concerned with technology's relationship to culture and the creative process. He is a founding member of BEIGE, a group of computer programmers and enthusiasts who recycle obsolete computers and video game systems to make art and music, and a member of RSG (Radical Software Group). Arcangel's work has been exhibited at the American Museum of the Moving Image, the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Guggenheim,
and The Museum of Modern Art in New York.

PRESS RELEASE:

Akron, Ohio, Jan. 18, 2006 - Cory Arcangel is a computer artist whose work is concerned with technology's relationship to culture and the creative process. On Friday, Feb. 3, 2006, at 6 p.m., Arcangel will lecture at The University of Akron’s Folk Hall auditorium, in the Myers School of Art. His lecture title is “How I Went from Modifying Nintendo Games to Giving Lectures about Simon and Garfunkel”. Arcangel explains that “My work is inspired by and functions as a means to understand my own media-saturated existence. Since the present and future is filtered through the past, my work with digital media technology is directly informed by my time spent with the likes of television, music, video games, and early Macintosh computers.”

In Akron, Arcangel will discuss his recent work which he says “involves issues with new media in relation to exhibition, web 2, ‘links’, Eddie Van Halen, Starbucks, and California.” The lecture is funded by the Myers Artist in Residence Program, and is free and open to the public – seating is limited.

Arcangel is a founding member of BEIGE, a group of computer programmers and enthusiasts who recycle obsolete computers and video game systems to make art and music and create new meanings. As part of the Emily Davis Gallery’s “Outside the Box: New Cinematic Experiences” exhibition at UA which runs Jan. 18 – Feb. 24, 2006, two of Arcangel’s game hacks are on display: Super Mario Clouds v2k3 and I Shot Andy Warhol. Cory Arcangel's work has been exhibited at the American Museum of the Moving Image, the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Guggenheim, and The Museum of Modern Art in New York. For additional information on the lecture or exhibition, call 330-972-5951 or email dwatt@uakron.edu.

February 20, 2006

soup shot tournament!

play the favorite “i shot andy warhol” game in the emily davis gallery!

tournament date: monday, feb.20th, 11:30 a.m.*
shoot to win: prizes, fame, and immortality!
open to all students: sign up in the gallery by feb. 17th

ANY QUESTIONS? Ask Diana in Room #104 or Gallery personnel
*If you want to compete, but cannotat this time, please indicate on sign-up form.

February 24, 2006

OUTSIDE THE BOX: NEW CINEMATIC EXPERIENCES

MYERS RESIDENCY PROGRAM EXHIBITION
JANUARY 17 - FEBRUARY 24, 2006
Opening Reception, January 18, 4:30pm - 7pm
UA Jazz Musicians to perform 5 - 6:30pm

Curated by Seth Thompson

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This exhibition is designed to highlight experimental works that have pushed the boundaries of traditional cinema using computer and electronic technology. From computer games to interactive films and immersive environments, “Outside the Box” will allow students and the community in general to see and experience non-traditional cinema. Exhibition artists include: Jud Yalkut, Cory Arcangel, Toni Dove, Lev Manovich and Andreas Kratky, Tennessee Rice Dixon, and Paul Catanese.

PRESS RELEASE:

Akron, Ohio, Dec. 5, 2005 – Featuring experimental works that challenge the boundaries of traditional cinema, “Outside the Box: New Cinematic Experiences” will be on exhibit Jan. 18-Feb. 24, 2006, in the Emily Davis Gallery at The University of Akron.

Using computer and electronic technology, the free exhibition will showcase works by seven pioneering media artists who explore such subjects as computer game hacking, interactive cinema, and database-driven movies.

“This innovative exhibition displays the interplay of art and media in a variety of formats,” says Seth Thompson, curator of “Outside the Box” and an adjunct faculty member in the Mary Schiller Myers School of Art at The University of Akron. “It enables us to explore a new frontier in contemporary art.”

Emily Davis Gallery is in Folk Hall, 150 E. Exchange St. Gallery hours are Monday, Tuesday, Friday and Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Wednesday and Thursday from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. For more information call 330-972-5951, e-mail dwatt@uakron.edu, or visit www.uakron.edu/art.

The exhibition’s free public opening reception is Jan. 18 from 4:30 to 7 p.m.

Two media artists will give free public lectures in the Folk Hall Auditorium. Cory Arcangel will talk about “How I Went from Modifying Nintendo Games to Giving Lectures About Simon and Garfunkel” at 6 p.m. on Feb. 3. Arcangel takes a novel approach to computer games by hacking them as part of his artistic practice to create new meanings. Super Mario Clouds v2k3 and I Shot Andy Warhol are two of Arcangel’s game hacks in the Emily Davis Gallery exhibition.

Computer artist Patrick Lichty, widely known for his work as the computer animator for the activist art group called The Yes Men, will talk about “Confessions of a Culture Hacker: Probes, Pranks, and Investigations” at 6 p.m. on March 24.

The other artists showcased in “Outside the Box” include:

• Jud Yalkut, a video artist with a 40-plus year career focusing on spiritual transformation, is showing his 1966 landmark piece Turn, Turn, Turn and his 2005 video installation Sea Islands.

• Toni Dove’s interactive video installation Sally or the Bubble Burst uses speech recognition and synthesis to allow viewers to interact with Sally, a responsive virtual character based on the 1930s fan and bubble dancer Sally Rand.

• Lev Manovich and Andreas Kratky’s Soft Cinema: Navigating the Database features three database-driven films in which software creates movies by selecting and editing media from a database.

• Tennessee Rice Dixon’s 1995 award-winning Scrutiny in the Great Round CD-ROM is a slow-moving and interactive collage about birth and marriage that employs sound, poetry, and imagery of artifacts and symbols from cultures throughout history. Dixon’s artist book that inspired the CD-ROM will also be on view.

• Media artist Paul Catanese will show three of his hybrid creations: Medicinal Craft of Cephalopods, Recollections of a Somnambulist and A Short History of the Bezoar Stone made for the Gameboy Advance.

“Outside the Box” is part of the Myers Artist-in-Residency Program at the UA Myers School of Art. The program brings nationally and internationally renowned artists to campus to share their diverse talents with students, alumni and the community.