Turbulence Commission: "iSkyTV" by the Institute for Infinitely Small Things
with Sophia Brueckner
http://turbulence.org/works/iSkyTV
[For desktops and mobile devices]

"iSkyTV" is a networked art project that detects the user's location and 
animates the Google Street View sky above their heads. The project is a 
reimagining of "Sky TV" -- Yoko Ono's famed video work from 1966 -- that 
brought the outside space inside the gallery. In contrast, "iSkyTV" brings the 
interior space of the database outside and invites viewers to reflect on a 
world in which our natural resources and landscapes have been digitized, 
databased, copyrighted and archived.

"iSkyTV" is a 2012 commission of New Radio and Performing Arts, Inc. for its 
Turbulence website. It was funded by the National Endowment for the Arts.

BIOGRAPHIES

The INSTITUTE FOR INFINITELY SMALL THINGS conducts creative, participatory 
research that aims to temporarily transform public spaces and instigate 
dialogue about democracy, spatial justice and everyday life. The Institute’s 
projects use performance, conversation and unexpected interventions to 
investigate social and political “tiny things”. Their membership is varied and 
interdisciplinary.

For this project, the Institute for Infinitely Small Things was led by 
CATHERINE D'IGNAZIO, a.k.a. kanarinka, who is an artist, educator and software 
developer. She is the former Director of the Experimental Geography Research 
Cluster at RISD’s Digital + Media MFA program and currently a graduate student 
at MIT's Center for Civic Media. Her artwork has been exhibited at the ICA 
Boston, Eyebeam, MASSMoCA and numerous public street corners around the world.

SOPHIA BRUECKNER, born in Detroit, MI, is an artist and engineer. Inseparable 
from computers since the age of two, she believes she is a cyborg. She received 
her Sc.B. in Computer Science and Applied Mathematics from Brown University, 
worked as a software engineer at Google, and earned her MFA in Digital + Media 
at the Rhode Island School of Design. She feels an urgency to understand and 
bring awareness to technology's controlling effects, and to encourage the 
ethical and thoughtful design of new technologies. She recently joined the MIT 
Media Lab as a graduate student in the Fluid Interfaces research group.

"Like" us on Facebook:
http://facebook.com/nrpa.org
http://facebook.com/turbulence.org

Follow us on Twitter:
http://twitter.com/turbulenceorg


Turbulence.org
[email protected]
http://turbulence.org
http://new-radio.org




______________________________________________
SPECTRE list for media culture in Deep Europe
Info, archive and help:
http://post.in-mind.de/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/spectre

Antwort per Email an