Drones at Home Phase 3: Unmanned Interventions (Performative Workshop)

  [image: Ricardo Dominguez, UC San Diego]

*Guest Speaker:* Ricardo Dominguez, Visual Arts

*Date: *October 23rd, 2012
*Time: *5-6pm
*Location: *gallery@calit2, Atkinson Hall, UC San Diego
*Host: *gallery@calit2

[event website <http://gallery.calit2.net>]

*DESCRIPTION/ABSTRACT:*
This artist talk with *artists Ricardo Dominguez, Sean Estelle, Ian Alan
Paul, Alex Rivera and Trish Stone* is part of the Drones at Home Phase 3
exhibition *UNMANNED INTERVENTIONS* which runs Oct. 18 to Nov. 14. The
exhibition will also include works by Gregory Sholette.

Artist and filmmaker Alex Rivera will be developing a project that explores
and reconfigures a UAV aerial platform that will seek to engage with the
drone industry in San Diego by employing visual texts from areas where
drones are heavily deployed. The Calit2 b.a.n.g. lab (bang.calit2.net) will
present designs for a singing border drone entitled, *The Palindrone*.

Trish Stone will exhibit videos from her project titled *Lighter Than Air*,
an artist-led activity featuring the launch of a balloon drone (a weather
balloon fitted with a video camera). The activity is open to community
participation on many levels, including flying the balloon, holding
neighboring balloons, and using hand-held mirrors to communicate with the
aerial surveillance device.

Artist Gregory Sholette is featured in the *UNMANNED INTERVENTIONS* exhibit
but will not be present for the artist talk on Oct. 23. The *iDrone* is a
sort of lumpy, predator drone-like sculpture whose chassis is made of faded
documents, images and other archival materials from both the little-known
radical past of America and artist Gregory Sholette. Some of these come
from his own activist art past, and other documents are things he has
researched. Viewers can zoom in on the various archival images and
publications, and clicking on certain documents takes viewers to various
websites, while clicking on other documents provides a PDF of what is
represented. It is all bound together so that the entire contraption hovers
so that *iDrone* becomes our repressed history returning in the form of a
weaponized thing. http://www.3das.gr/space/greg.html

*Surveilled* by Sean Estelle is the final product of his work in the Calit2
Summer Undergraduate Research Scholars program. In this program,
undergraduates work with a faculty advisor on a topic of interest over a
period of 10 weeks. *Surveilled* addresses the interplay between physical
and digital information platforms, in the context of the examinations
within *Drones at Home*. The piece interrogates the performative, biased
nature of research and author/producership, and ultimately puts Calit2
itself under surveillance – questioning how the institution handles an
unmanned intervention.

Ian Alan Paul, artist and researcher at b.a.n.g. lab in the Fall quarter,
will present *Do Not Kill Registry*, a digital artwork which focuses on the
visual rhetorics used to interpolate the human subject as well as
post-national expressions of Human Rights.

This artist panel is part of the second of three performative workshops,
which are month-long residencies when the artist and collaborators will
develop new work in the gallery spaces, using the space as a test site,
with the gallery open to visitors during scheduled hours.

*SPEAKER BIO:*
*Ricardo Dominguez* is a co-founder of The Electronic Disturbance Theater
(EDT), a group that developed Virtual-Sit-In technologies in 1998 in
solidarity with the Zapatista communities in Chiapas, Mexico. He is
co-Director of Thing (thing.net), an ISP for artists and activists. His
recent Electronic Disturbance Theater project with Brett Stalbaum, Micha
Cardenas and Amy Sara Carroll, the Transborder Immigrant Tool (a GPS
cellphone safety net tool for crossing the Mexico/U.S border) was the
winner of a Transnational Communities Award funded by Cultural Contact,
Endowment for Culture Mexico-U.S. and handed out by the U.S. Embassy in
Mexico, also funded by Calit2 and two Transborder Awards from the UCSD
Center for the Humanities.

Dominguez is an Associate Professor at UCSD in the Visual Arts Department,
a Hellman Fellow, and a Principal/Principle Investigator at Calit2 (
http://bang.calit2.net). He is also co-founder of PARTICLE GROUP with
artists Diane Ludin, Nina Waisman, and Amy Sara Carroll. A gesture about
nanotechnology entitled Particles of Interest: Tales of the Matter Market (
http://pitmm.net) was presented in Berlin (2007), the San Diego Museum of
Art (2008), Oi Futuro, and FILE festivals in Brazil (2008). Ricardo
Dominguez has just opened the Performative Nano-Robotics Lab in the new
Structural and Materials Engineering (SME) building and research center at
UCSD.

*Sean Estelle* is a 4th-year undergraduate student at UCSD, studying
Theatre and Visual Arts (Studio). He has been working in the
gallery@calit2for the past year as a Gallery Assistant and Tour Guide.
He has been part
of many UCSD Theatre productions, including *reasons to be pretty* and *The
Seagull*. His studio practice, which was featured last year in the UCSD
Undergraduate Visual Arts show, focuses on the transformation of space,
both physical and virtual, with performative interventions including
installation, sculpture and live performance. He will be continuing this
work in the coming year as part of the Visual Arts Studio Honors Program.

*Ian Alan Paul* is a writer, artist and programmer living in the Bay Area
of California. His past work has dealt with the topics of border violence,
biopolitics and prefigurative social movements. The current research of
Paul focuses on feminist and poststructuralist critiques of Human Rights
discourses, and more specifically on the visual rhetorics used to
interpolate the human subject as well as post-national expressions of Human
Rights. His work has been featured in *The Atlantic, Al Jazeera, Le Monde*,
and *USA Today*, and has been exhibited in galleries in Asia, North America
and Europe. He received his MFA and MA at the San Francisco Art Institute
in 2011 and is in the process of completing his Ph.D. studies in the Film
and Digital Media program at UC Santa Cruz. He can be found on twitter at
@ianalanpaul.

*Alex Rivera* is a New York based digital media artist and filmmaker. His
first feature film, *SLEEP DEALER* premiered at Sundance 2008, and won two
awards, including the Waldo Salt Screenwriting Award. Rivera is a Sundance
Fellow and a Rockefeller Fellow. His work, which addresses concerns of the
Latino community through a language of humor, satire, and metaphor, has
also been screened at the Berlin International Film Festival, New
Directors/New Films, Guggenheim Museum, PBS, Telluride, and other
international venues. For more on the artist, visit
http://alexrivera.com/BIOS.html.

*Gregory Sholette* is a New York-based artist and writer, who earned his
MFA from UC San Diego in 1995. He is a founding member of Political Art
Documentation-Distribution (PAD-D: 1980-1988), and REPOhistory (1989-2000),
and author of the book, *Dark Matter: Art and Politics in an Age of
Enterprise Culture*, Pluto Press, 2011. His most recent exhibitions include
15 Islands for Robert Moses at the Queens Museum of Art Panorama, and the
Imaginary Archive: Galway, Ireland. He is the co-curator with Olivier
Ressler of the exhibition Its the Political Economy, Stupid, at the
Austrian Cultural Forum New York. An Assistant Professor of Sculpture at
Queens College: City University of New York (CUNY), he is a member of Gulf
Labor Coalition; The Institute for Wishful Thinking; and an academic
adviser for the new Home Workspace Program in Beirut, Lebanon.

*Trish Stone* is a new media artist and curator, whose conceptual art
projects have been exhibited locally, nationally and internationally. Her
project, *Things I Never Say*, in which she used publicly accessible
webcams in San Diego as a platform for public performance, was recently
exhibited at Art Produce Gallery, along with an Outdoor Video Screening of
videos curated along the theme of public space. Recent exhibitions include
Angels Gate Cultural Center and the Oceanside Museum of Art. Trish Stone
holds an MFA (2003) from California College of Arts and Crafts. She
continues her interactive, interruptive, interventionist art practice in
San Diego, where she serves as Tour and Gallery Coordinator for Calit2, UC
San Diego. For more on the artist, visit http://trishstone.com.

*MORE INFORMATION:*
The artist talk is Oct. 23 at 5pm. The UNMANNED INTERVENTIONS performative
workshop will be open during regular gallery hours from 11am to 5pm
weekdays in the gallery@calit2 on the first floor of Atkinson Hall. Media
contact: Doug Ramsey, [email protected]. To RSVP, contact Trish Stone,
[email protected]. A second artist talk featuring all the artists, including
Gregory Sholette, moderated by Ricardo Dominguez, will take place Nov. 1 at
5pm in the gallery@calit2. http://gallery.calit2.net


-- 
Trish Stone
Tour and Gallery Coordinator
Calit2, University of California San Diego
Desk: 858-822-5307
Cell: 858-336-6456
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