This is the website for ARTD/DMST 3325, Site Specific Design, a seminar/studio course in the Electronic Media Arts Design (eMAD) program at the University of Denver, Fall, 2010.

Monday, October 25, 2010

References for Artists from this week's readings

Carlotta Brunetti
The artist's website.
A page about the artist on greenmuseum, including a link to an artist's statement.

Susan Collins
The artist's website.
A short video about her work "Seascape."
The requisite wikipedia page.

 Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster
wikiwikiwiki. 
The artist's difficult to navigate website.

Guy Debord
A short biography.
A self-interview with, and by, the Situationists.
Description of the flâneur, a concept related to the dérive.

Monday, October 18, 2010

References for Artists from this week's reading

Mark Lewis
The artist's website. 
Yes, he has a wikipedia page.
New York Times review from 2005.
...and a 2009 review from the Washington Post.
A series of film stills and video clips from the artist's installation at the 2009 Venice Biennale.

Germaine Kruip
The artist's website.
A short article from Frieze Magazine.
Illuminating article from the Stedelijk Museum Bureau Amsterdam.

Kutlug Ataman
Yes, he has a wikipedia page.
The Institute for the Readjustment of  Clocks (the artist's website).

Francis Alys and Rafael Ortega
Long essay and several images of work by Alys (some with Ortega).
Francis Alys website.


Artists/Architects/Designers cited in Poetry of Augmented Space

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Krzysztof Wodiczko

Art21 on the Tijuana Projection project

Creative Time on Veteran's Flame

Venice Biennale on Europe of Strangers

BOMBLive interview w/KW clip 1

BOMBLive interview w/KW clip 2

BOMBLive interview w/KW clip 3

Profile from MIT
Krzysztof Wodiczko (born 1943, Warsaw, Poland) has been creating site-specific slide and video projections both within galleries and using architectural facades and monuments as backdrops for nearly thirty years. These politically-charged works of art, which have been shown in over a dozen countries around the world, speak to issues of human rights, democracy, violence, alienation, and inhumanity, and using sound and motion often include testimonies of the people whose plights they address. Complementing these projections are Wodiczko’s nomadic instruments, designed to empower marginalized members of society such as immigrants, the homeless, these who lost their closest to street violence and war, women, and children-survivors of domestic abuse, the war veterans and others.

Krzysztof Wodiczko emigrated twice, from Poland to Canada and then from Canada to the United States. He now shares his time between New York and Cambridge, Massachusetts, where he is a professor a head of Interrogative Design Group, and a director of the Center for Advanced Visual Studies and the at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Since 1980, has created over 70 Public Projections of still and video images that critically animate historic monuments and civic edifices. Public Projections with still images include: The Grand Army Plaza Memorial Arch, Brooklyn, NY (1983); The South African Embassy, London (1985); The Hirshhorn Museum, Washington D.C. (1988); The Whitney Museum of American Art, New York (1989),The Lenin Monument, Berlin (1990) and Arco de la Victoria, Madrid (1991). Public Projections involving sound and motion began with City Hall Tower, Krakow (1996) and later engaged the following monumental city symbolic structers: Bunker Hill Monument, Boston (1998); A-Bomb Dome, Hiroshima (1999); El Centro Cultural, Tijuana, Mexico (2001); facade of the National Gallery in Warsaw (2005) and the Kustmuseum Basel, Switzerald (2006). The Hiroshima Projection, was organized after Krzysztof Wodiczko was awarded the Hiroshima Art Prize.

Throughout his career, Mr. Wodiczko has also developed a series of tools and devices for urban interventions, such as Homeless Vehicle (1988-89), Poliscar (1991), as well as portable and wearable communication instrumentations such as Alien Staff (1992), Porte-Parole (1994), AEgis (2000) and Dis-Armor (1999-present). Dis-Armor, which was first developed for the City of Hiroshima, than was on view in the Triennial exhibition at the International Center of Photography and more recently in the exhibition the Interventionists at MASS MoCA.

Mr. Wodiczko's work can be found in numerous public collections such as: The Fundació Tapies, Barcelona, Spain; Museum Sztuki, Lodz, Poland, The Museum of Contemporary Art, San Diego; The National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa; the Artbank, Canada; the Israel Museum, Jerusalem; the Museum of Contemporary Art, Lyon, France; FNAC, and FNAC Ile de France, Paris; FRAC Pays de la Loire, Nantes, France; The National Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto; The Jewish Museum, New York; The Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; The Hiroshima City Museum of Contemporary Art, The Center for Contemporary Art, Warsaw; The New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York. Zacheta National Gallery of Art, Warsaw and MACBA, Kunstmuseum Basel. Museum of Contemporary Art in Barcelona.

In 1998, Krzysztof Wodiczko received the 4th Hiroshima Art Prize "for his contribution as an artist to the world peace", in 2004 Kepesz Award at MIT, in 2005 award for “distinguished body of artistic work” by the College Art Association, in 2007 Katarzyna Kobro Award in Poland and in 2008 the Skauchegan Medal for Sculpture.