2013-01-29

Art Update - January 2013



It's good to be a busy artist. It's not good to be too busy to tell your friends about it. On that note, here is a list of upcoming shows and some other fun stuff I've been working on.

Electronics Alive VII

Dorothy Cowden runs a terrific gallery at the University of Tampa, and her and the jury decided to show my recent piece "CF_11_1179" (above) in the latest Electronics Alive. This 7th installment (the first in 2001) features dozens of video, installation, and multimedia works from around the world, and a number of artist talks.

Runs Jan 29 - Feb 23
Scarfone-Hartley Gallery, University of Tampa
http://ealive.utarts.com

13FOREST

I'll be one of three artists featured in "Design and Chance: Three Approaches to Contemporary Printmaking", at 13Forest Gallery in Arlington, MA, this coming month. Kristin Breiseth, another of the three, and I met at Wes Simon's studio a few years ago and we immediately saw eye-to-eye. Her work is remarkably intricate and subtle, and I love all of it. Check out the links below, and I hope to see you at the opening or artist talks.

Runs Feb 8 - Mar 15
Opening reception Feb 8, 7-9pm
Artist talks Feb 28, 7-9pm
http://13forest.com/exhibit/show-DesignandChance.shtml
http://seeartbykb.com/

ATNE Workshop

I'll be giving a workshop on using Processing to make generative artwork at the Boston Cyberarts Gallery late next month. The workshop is open to anyone, regardless of programming experience. I hope to demystify computational physics and bring non-programmers from zero to generative artwork (a tantalizingly short distance) in less than an hour.

Wednesday, February 27th, 7:30pm
Boston Cyberarts Gallery, Jamaica Plain, MA
http://atne.org/events/generative-art-using-computational-physics/

Open Studio

Finally, if you can't make it to any of the above events, but find yourself in the Boston area the weekend of April 6-7, stop by my apartment and hang out amidst works from 2001-2013. I'll be open 11am to 6pm.

April 6-7, 11am-6pm
115 Langley Rd, Newton, MA
http://www.newtonopenstudios.org/

Here's some other stuff that I've been up to, including a book, a talk, an interactive piece, and some small mountains!

Aleatoric Art in the 21st Century

"Artist and Aleatoric Art Gallery creator J. Coleman Miller, along with artist and writer Ray Cabarga have produced the definitive volume on chance in contemporary fine art..." I'm honored to not only be one of the 44 artists featured in this beautiful book, but my work was chosen for the cover and Forward. The writing is tongue-in-cheek, and the artists are all producing work that I envy. The book is professionally done, and the print quality is excellent.

http://www.blurb.com/b/3857455-aleatoric-art-in-the-21st-century

Video/Kinect installation

Collaborator Jim Susinno and I have been working on a video installation called "Swarm" for a few months. We showed it at
COLLISION18:present last November, but have improved it since then. A Microsoft Kinect reads the motions of the viewer, generating vortexes whenever the viewer moves their hands. Watch the video below to see how a user can subtly or dramatically affect the falling leaves in this piece.

http://youtu.be/ib9cP4JKWx8
http://collisioncollective.org/artwork/swarm
http://jimbomania.com/

LISA 2012

I was asked by Isabel Draves to give a quick talk at the Leaders In Software and Art conference in New York City in October. The result was a 5-minute distillation of background, thoughts, goals, and artwork, and is probably the best I've ever looked and sounded on stage. Which is a good thing, as the conference was held at the Guggenheim Museum. The conference was terrific---I cannot imagine being a software artist and missing it. Check out the other videos on the SoftwareAndArt channel, too.

Video of talk at LISA2012
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zReEz7VLTQU

TinyMtn

I started a small business in January: I'm designing and selling 3d prints of real mountains. The business is hosted by Shapeways, a large print-on-demand 3d-printing company in New York and Eindhoven. Each model is a true-to-scale representation of a real place on Earth, covering up to 100 square miles, but including details as small as 30' across! If there's a mountain climber or hiker in your family, please tell them about "TinyMtn."

http://tinymtn.com/

That is all for now. Have a great day, and thank you for reading.

-Mark


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