News

7 Simultaneous Lecturers: Indy Arts and Globalization

Tomorrow, I’ll be a speaker at the event: 7 Simultaneous Lecturers: Indy Arts and Globalization

I’m speaking about “Design Art in Indianapolis” and highlighting some really exciting local designers and artists:

Terry Border, Amy McAdams, Artur Silva, Emma Overman and Ryan Abegglen.  Should be fun!

Indy Talks Poster

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Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010 News No Comments

Opening of IAAC Erasing Borders: Passport to Contemporary Indian Art of the Diaspora 2009

Erasing Borders: Passport to Contemporary Indian Art of the diaspora 2009

My video “Restless Portrait: A Disappearing Painting” was selected for inclusion in the exhibit:  Erasing Borders: Passport to Contemporary Indian Art of the Diaspora 2009 organized by the Indo-American Arts Council.  The opening was this weekend at the Dowd Gallery at SUNY-Cortland.  I’m thrilled to be a part of this exhibit!

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Friday, March 6th, 2009 News No Comments

Speaking at the 2009 Hawaii International Conference on Arts and Humanities

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A bit of exciting news!  I’ll be presenting at the 2009 Hawaii International Conference on Arts and Humanities in Honolulu on January 9th, 2009.

My paper is entitled: Painting in the Digital Age: When Pixel meets Paintbrush.  Here’s the abstract I submitted:

This paper examines my paintings from the series “Digital Life”, comprised of computer screen imagery rendered in oil paint.  The paintings form a link between traditional painting and the contemporary digital world and as such, connect the past with the present.

As an avid museum-goer, I am startled to see how little time viewers spend looking at paintings, but will spend countless hours staring at digital screens.  My idea, in order to bridge this divide, has been to turn the screens into paintings: to inject the texture, brushwork and physical quality of oil paint into the virtual, technological realm.

The subject of these paintings is the UI (User Interface) design of computers, the icons and symbols that characterize the digital experience.  This interface is familiar to millions of people, often as a mundane feature of their work-lives.  By making paintings of them, I am memorializing an experience that millions have on a daily basis; in a sense finding art within everyday experience.

This paper examines these paintings within the context of both contemporary painting and the historical oil-painting tradition.  Additionally, this work is influenced by innovations in the fields of computer science and graphic design, and these connections are highlighted and examined.

Finally, since digital images of these paintings are scattered all across the Internet, I examine the recursive nature of making paintings of computer screens and displaying them on the Web.

In an era when there is fierce competition for people’s attention, and digital screens are often examined far more closely than paintings, my work forms a bridge between the two, breathing new life into the dialogue.

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Friday, January 2nd, 2009 Digital Life, News No Comments