Blurring boundaries between many disciplines, Context Providers supplies a context and a rationale for discussing how technological change has affected the function of art, the role of the artist, and the way artistic productions are disseminated. It also explores how technologically networked environments increase the need for flexible information filters as a framework for establishing meaning. Moreover, Context Providers considers the work of media artists who are directly engaging the scientific community through collaboration and active dialogue.Context Providers will appeal to art historians, theorists and curators, as well as art administrators, grant providers and those studying both practice and theory in media arts.
Cuprins
Introduction
PART ONE
Defining Conditions For Digital Arts: Social Function, Authorship, and Audience – Margot Lovejoy
Missing In Action: Agency and Meaning In Interactive Art – Kristine Stiles and Edward A. Shanken
Collaborative Systems: Redefining Public Art – Sharon Daniel
Play, Participation, and Art: Blurring the Edges – Mary Flanagan
PART TWO
Contextual Networks: Data, Identity, and Collective Production – Christiane Paul
Aesthetics of Information Visualization – Warren Sack
Identity Operated In New Mode: Context and Body/Space/Time – Marina Gržinić
Game Engines As Creative Frameworks – Robert F. Nideffer
Mapping the Collective – Sara Diamond
PART THREE
Shifting Media Contexts: When Scientific Labs Become Art Studios – Victoria Vesna
Biotechnical Art and the Ethico-Aesthetic Paradigm – Anna Munster
Working With Wetware – Ruth G. West
Defining Life: Artists Challenge Conventional Classifications – Ellen K. Levy
Art and Science Research: Active Contexts and Discourses – Jill Scott and Daniel Bisig
Despre autor
Margot Lovejoy is professor emerita of visual arts at SUNY Purchase and the author of Digital Currents: Art in the Electronic Age.
Christiane Paul is adjunct curator of new media arts at the Whitney Museum of American Art and director of Intelligent Agent, a service organization dedicated to digital art.
Victoria Vesna is a media artist and professor in the Department of Design and Media Arts at the UCLA School of the Arts. She is also director of the UCLA Art|Sci center and the UC Digital Arts Research Network.