Randall Packer on Fri, 1 Mar 2002 14:19:01 +0100 (CET)
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[Nettime-bold] Eduardo Kac : From Telepresence to Transgenic Art
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Title: Eduardo Kac : From Telepresence to Transgenic
Art
Eduardo Kac : From Telepresence to Transgenic
Art
A Visiting Artist Lecture
Friday, March 8, 2002, 7:00 PM (admission
free)
Mount Royal Station Auditorium (S3)
Maryland Institute College of Art
Mount Royal Ave. & Cathedral Street in
Baltimore
Presented by the Maryland Institute College of Art Center
for New Media
and the Johns Hopkins University Digital Media Center
in association with the JHU Film and Media Studies Program
and the Peabody Conservatory of Music, Department of Computer
Music
<<From Telepresence to Transgenic
Art>>
Eduardo Kac will discuss his pioneering work in telepresence and
transgenic art. Kac first developed telepresence art in the mid 1980s.
Telepresence art results from the coupling of telerobots and
networking, a new platform that became widely employed on the Internet
by the late 1990s, when Kac introduced transgenic art. This new art
form is based on the use of genetic engineering to create unique
living beings and to address the social and philosophical issues
raised by the work.
Kac will present some of his artworks, including
"Genesis", a transgenic piece that explores the intricate
relationship between biology, belief systems, information technology,
dialogical interaction, ethics and the Internet. The key element of
the work is an "artist's gene," a synthetic gene that was
created by Kac by translating a sentence from the biblical book of
Genesis.
Kac will also present "GFP Bunny," a live green
fluorescent rabbit named Alba who lives with Kac and his family in
Chicago, and "The Eighth Day," a self-contained artificial
ecological system. Eduardo Kac is considered "one of the ten
people who is shaping the art world around the globe" (ARTnews,
December 2001).
***********
The MICA Center for New Media is developing and
coordinating partnerships with arts organizations, educational
institutions, and industry to initiate collaborative opportunities in
a complex interdisciplinary field. The Center for New Media serves as
a bridge between the arts and its technology and educational partners
by showcasing media experimentation across the disciplines in response
to the need for technology-based research in contemporary aesthetic
inquiry and artistic production.
The Digital Media Center located in the Mattin Center of
Johns Hopkins University comprises a full-time professional staff
where there are digital music and digital video specialists who
provide instruction and workshops. Guest artists are invited to
display their work, offering seminars and master classes. The center
is a non-academic facility open to students of all majors and enrolled
in all courses.
For more information:
Center for New Media
http://cnm.mica.edu
MICA Office of Communications
410.225.2300
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