Allison Berkoy
Allison Berkoy is a Brooklyn based artist working at the
intersection of art, performance, code and technology. With mixed
physical and electronic media, she creates videos, sculptural
installations, interactive environments, and performances between
humans and machines.
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Kate Sicchio
Dr. Kate Sicchio is a choreographer, media artist and performer whose work explores the interface between choreography and technology. Her work includes performances, installations, web and video projects. Her PhD focused on the use of real-time video systems within live choreography and the conceptual framework of ‘choreotopolgy’ a way to describe this work.
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Eric Corriel
After growing up on Long Island, Eric Corriel graduated from Cornell University where he received a Bachelors of Arts in Philosophy while also studying Fine Art and Computer Science. He later received a Diplôme National d’Arts Plastiques from the École Régionale Supérieure d’Expression Plastique in Tourcoing, France. Currently living in Brooklyn, Eric takes the urban landscape as a medium in which to create site-specific video installations in the public realm. He teaches interaction design at the School of Visual Arts in New York City, where he is also Lead Web Designer and Developer.
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Gene Kogan
Gene Kogan is an artist and a programmer who is interested in generative systems, artificial intelligence, and software for creativity and self-expression. He is a collaborator within numerous open-source software projects, and leads workshops and demonstrations on topics at the intersection of code, art, and technology activism. Gene initiated and contributes to ml4a, a free book about machine learning for artists, activists, and citizen scientists. He regularly publishes video lectures, writings, and tutorials to facilitate a greater public understanding of the topic.
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Katherine Bennett
Katherine Bennett is a digital media artist. She utilizes sound, light,
programming, and computing to represent people, relationships
and activities that happen in other spaces and times as well as
interactive & responsive multichannel narratives. She creates a
delicate presence of these entities, mapping them over time and
making them visceral. She is fascinated by the liminal spaces
created by digital communities, social networks, and the culture
that transpires as a result.
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Linda Lauro-Lazin
Linda Lauro-Lazin is an artist, curator, lecturer and educator. She is a Fulbright scholar in art. Her work is multi-disciplinary exploring impermanence, perception and vehicles of communication.
Ms Lauro-Lazin has been teaching for many years and has organized and moderated many guest lectures and panel discussions. She has served on international art juries and has curated some provocative exhibitions. Linda has a great passion for building community and sharing her ideas about art. She also loves a good story.
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Ricardo Miranda Zuniga
Ricardo Miranda Zúñiga approaches art as a social practice that
seeks to establish dialogue in public spaces. Having been born of
immigrant parents and grown up between Nicaragua and San
Francisco, a strong awareness of inequality and discrimination was
established at an early age. Themes such as immigration,
discrimination, gentrification and the effects of globalization
extend from highly subjective experiences and observations into
works that tactically engage others through popular metaphors
while maintaining critical perspectives.
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Richard Jochum
Richard Jochum is a media artist with a strong focus on video,
installation, and performance. He has received his PhD in
philosophy from the University of Vienna and an MFA in Sculpture
and Media Art from the University of Applied Arts in Vienna. His
work is represented by Gallery Bundo in South Korea and Gallery
Lindner in Austria.
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Terry Nauheim
Terry Nauheim explores sound and visual relationships through digital media, drawing, and installation. In addition to producing her work, Ms. Nauheim teaches computer arts as a full-time professor at New York Institute of Technology. She sits on the Board of Directors of NYC ACM Siggraph and was chair of 2008 NYC Metropolitan Area College Computer Animation Festival (MetroCAF).
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Oyster by Joe Diebes
Oyster is both an opera and a surround sound and image installation by Joe Diebes that traces a surprising musical history of our algorithmically regulated society.
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Ursula Endlicher
Since the mid 1990s the Internet has impacted Ursula Endlicher's
practice: She builds frameworks for Internet Art works and
performances, but lets real-time data be the lead for their
choreographies. She extracts rule sets from the Web and
repurposes them for installations. Her works intersect Internet art,
performance and installation.
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hácÌŒek presents a physical installation, VR experience, and printed data maps. It employs data to inform an immersive installation while positioning it’s larger impact towards metaphors of networked landscape, security and wayfinding.
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hácÌŒek
Blake Marques Carrington works within the spheres of the sound, visual performing arts. Solo exhibits include the Contemporary Art Center New Orleans, Philadelphia Photo Arts Center, Central Utah Art Center, and VisArts, featuring work from inkjet painting to video installation using custom software systems. Parallel to his work in the visual arts context, he writes and performs original audiovisual compositions and releases full-length albums.
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Blake Marques Carrington
Seth Cluett
Seth Cluett is an American artist whose work includes installation,
concert music, performance, photography, and critical writing. His
“subtle...seductive, immersive” (Artforum) work has been
characterized as “rigorously focused and full of detail” (e/i) and
“dramatic, powerful, and at one with nature” (The Wire).
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