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30 January 2008 by nathaniel

Simulate Editions at Ten Cubed Gallery, Second Life

Simulate Editions
unique and authenticated virtual art objects

Premiering at:
Crossing the Void II
Ten Cubed Gallery, Second Life
opening receptions 31 January 7pm EST (1pm SLT) and 1 February 7pm GMT (8am SLT)
SLURL: http://slurl.com/secondlife/depo%20park%201/200/55/22

Simulate Editions

Artists Scott Kildall and Nathaniel Stern have each been exploring performance and performativity in their archival prints. Kildall restages then remediates iconic performance artworks in Second Life, and Stern straps on a scanner appendage and battery pack, and performs images into existence; both processes produce art objects in the real world.

For Crossing the Void II at Ten Cubed Gallery – Haydn Shaughnessy’s new virtual space designed by New York architect Benn Dunkley – they were asked to produce unique virtual art works for sale in Second Life, which mirror their real life prints. In response, they created a series of “Simulate Editions”, where every ‘print’ is individually signed and numbered by hand, making each work ‘technically unique.’ The works are copy and modification protected, but also come with a resize script, so that the new collector/owner – and only them – can grow or shrink their purchase so as to fit into their SL space.

In addition to Kildall and Stern, also on the exhibition are Chris Ashley, Jon Coffelt and Claire Keating.

Simulate Editions

Posted in art, art and tech, Compressionism, Ireland Art, pop culture, south african art, stimulus, technology, theory ·

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21 January 2008 by nathaniel

ten cubed

ten-cubed.jpg

I’m involved, via Haydn Shaugnessy (my Irish gallery) in a funky new project, where he’s hired a ‘Real World’ architect to build an astonishingly beautiful gallery out at sea in Second Life: Ten Cubed (pictured). Via some of Haydn’s blogging on the subject:

About a year ago I decided to set up a real life gallery. The reason was simply that I love media art but couldn’t find galleries that specialise in it. Now I have a media-art gallery and on a day-to-day basis experience the fact that the audience for this is global rather than local. Media-art is beginning to find an audience in Ireland but its real audience is urban anywhere.

I can connect to some of that audience through a website . But what I can’t do through a website is join people in appreciating the art; not when they could be anywhere from New York to Naples. Nor could many of the audience really appreciate the artwork: they’d simply be viewing a 2D image.

With Ten Cubed I can do these things. I can stand with you and admire the work and together we can analyse and crit.

What I can also do is make room to showcase art that my physical gallery could not exhibit – because of its size and because of the sheer impracticality of giving over all my space to one large work. In Ten Cubed I can show any amount of art and at any scale. I can also help promote and encourage artists working in a virtual medium.

I have to say that Ten Cubed really is a visceral space – “walking” around and viewing my work, it’s the most free and embodied I’ve ever felt in a Virtual World. And one of the more exciting aspects of the exhibition – which I’ll blog about later in the week – is a project I’m working on with Scott Kildall, where we are making unique SL print editions: virtual, limited edition art, signed and numbered individually and by hand!

More on Haydn’s SL artists.

Posted in art, art and tech, Compressionism, Ireland Art, pop culture, re-blog tidbits, south african art, stimulus, technology ·

Archives

08 December 2007 by nathaniel

two shows i’m in on South Africa

Just found out that Art on Paper Gallery, who I often work with in Johannesburg, has been workin it for me a bit.

Opened 18 November, Prints / Books / Lights at the KZNSA Gallery in Durban – I think this may actually be the first time I’ve shown there. I’ve got work from Call and Response. Culled from a few sources:

In keeping with the spirit of things, the KZNSA encourages festive shoppers to its premises with the promise of gifts that escalate in value. Adorning its walls and floors and outlandishly crafted shelving systems is an exhibition of truly gorgeous editioned artist prints, complemented by a careful selection of art books, all illuminated with highly dramatic lights by designer darling Adriaan Hugo.

Editioned artists’ prints by Bruce Backhouse, Chris Diedericks, Claudette Schreuders, Colbert Mashile, Conrad Botes, Ditiro Makwena, Dorothee Kreutzveld, Dumisani Mabaso, Erika Hibbert, Espoir Kennedy, Fiona Pole, Joachim Schonfeldt, John Moore, Judith Mason, Kathryn Smith, Kim Berman, Kim Lieberman, Luan Nel, Mary Wafer, Nathaniel Stern, Pat Mautloa, Penny Siopis, Peter Machen, Robert Hodgins, Sam Nhlenegthwa, Thami Jali, Theresa-Anne Mackintosh, Trasi Henen, William Kentridge and Zak Benjamin will be for sale, along with contemporary reading lights for the home, puzzles by Kim Lieberman, books on art, architecture and design, along with archival notebooks and diaries.

Til 6 January. Also (opened today!) is Art on Paper’s (Johannesburg) annual holiday exhibition, where I’m showing new work (from my residency in Belgium) with Zak Benjamin, Robert Hodgins, Kim Lieberman, Dumisani Mubaso, Paul Molete, Luan Nel and Fiona Pole, through the new year:

december invite for Art on Paper Gallery, Johannesburg

Posted in art, art and tech, Compressionism, Links, me, south african art ·

Archives

03 November 2007 by nathaniel

New Prints, Autumn 2007

In my illness, I neglected to mention the opening of ‘New Prints’ at the International Print Center New York on Thursday. It’s too bad – I’m sure the opening, which was followed by an after-party in celebration of Art on Paper’s New Prints Review, was sure to be a blast. Still, I’m on this show with some amazing artists, definitely worth checking out. Please let me know how it looks if you go!

Autumn 2007

November 1- December 19th, 2007
OPENING RECEPTION: Thursday, November 1, 2007, 6-8 pm

International Print Center New York presents NEW PRINTS: Autumn 2007, the 25th presentation of our New Prints Program, from November 1 – December 19th . Consisting of 52 works by 41 artists, the exhibition represents a cross-section of some of the most exceptional printmaking today, continuing IPCNY’s commitment to provide an ongoing exhibition venue for contemporary prints and a major source of information about artists working in the medium. The exhibition will be on view in IPCNY’s gallery at 526 West 26th Street, Room 824, between 10th and 11th Avenues in Chelsea.

NEW PRINTS is one of a series of juried exhibitions organized by IPCNY four times each season featuring prints made within the past year by artists at all stages of their careers.

The Selections Committee for the exhibition was composed of: Christophe Cherix, Curator, Department of Prints and Illustrated Books, Museum of Modern Art; Jack Enders, collector and IPCNY Trustee; David Krut, Director, David Krut Projects; Miranda McClintic, independent curator and art advisor; Sheila Pepe, artist and Assistant Chairperson of Fine Arts, Pratt Institute; and Phil Sanders, Director, Robert Blackburn Printmaking Workshop.

A curatorial essay by Sheila Pepe will accompany the exhibition.

As always, a wide range of printmaking mediums is represented, from the most traditional to the most cutting-edge. Many of the pieces selected for the exhibition lead the fine art print in new and unexpected directions. Highlights include:  Chuck Close’s 11 x 8 ½ inch sheet of paper watermarked with his trademark self-portrait; Alex Dodge’s The Legendary Coelacanth, a computer numerical controlled engraving accompanied by an executable computer virus; a larger-than-life abstract human form printed in relief from what is described as “plant material—banyon tree aerial roots” by Michele Oka Doner;  William Kentridge’s  photogravures which must be viewed through a stereopticon viewer to see their 3D effect; and an enigmatic copper engraving after Giulio Romano by “Monogrammist ASR” (A.K.A Andrew Stein Raftery), accompanied by documentation that states it is  ‘the only known print to bear the monogram of this engraver…This is a fine, early impression with some plate tone, in excellent condition, trimmed on all sides to the platemark.”  This engraving is made in an unlimited edition.

The complete artists’ list is: Eric Avery, Tom Baker, Curtis Bartone, Louisiana Bendolph, Marieke Bolhuis, Maria de la Providencia Casanovas, Chuck Close, Michele Oka Doner, Trenton Doyle Hancock, Alex Dodge, Jessica Dunne, Richard Dupont, Eduardo Fausti, Barnaby Furnas, Joscelyn Gardner, Rie Hasegawa, Art Hazelwood, Yuji Hiratsuka, Laurie Hogin, Jenny Holzer, Tom Huck, William Kentridge, Joey Kötting, Beauvais Lyons, Steve McClure, Mark Mulroney, Abe Murley, Lynn Newcomb, Sarah Nicholls, Lothar Osterburg, Liliana Porter, Andrew Stein Raftery, Ana João Romana, Roser Sales, Dasha Shishkin, Jaune Quick-to-See-Smith, Tom Spleth, Nathaniel Stern, Craig Taylor, Mary Temple, and Nicola Tyson.

Posted in art, art and tech, Compressionism, Links, me, pop culture, re-blog tidbits, south african art, stimulus, uncategorical ·

Archives

22 October 2007 by nathaniel

new web site: wordpress as CMS / Portfolio

If you haven’t noticed, my main site has had a massive overhaul, with which the royal ‘we’ are very pleased.

Besides the new design, some new work and texts have been added in the upgrade process, most notably the digital and traditional prints I did at the Frans Masereel Centre in Belgium this summer, the Johannesburg-based public intervention from a few weeks ago (a continuation from my Wireframe Series started in Croatia), and new writings on my research and artistic inquiry.

For non-geeks:

The new site is driven by categories, so as to showcase interesting through-lines and trajectories in my pieces. Artworks are each listed across all the concepts and media they might fit into, and are then organized by date. A hidden system of keywords also helps to show related pieces, and there are other goodies such as lightbox slideshows, youtube videos, RSS feeds, and more, throughout the site. Feedback welcome!

For geeks: 

There are now 2 WordPress installs on this site: the blog (what you are reading now, this is a standard install) and the main site, which is using WP as a Content Management System.

The idea was to have an artist portfolio that did not look like a blog, but that did use a similar database for cross-categoried posts and related works (through tags) in a way that could showcase interesting through-lines and trajectories in my pieces. After a lot of research – and not wanting to have to do any database coding on my own – I came to WordPress as my best choice for a starting point; there are no changes to the wordpress core at all (just a very customized theme and a bunch of plugins) – I’m very pleased with the result:

http://nathanielstern.com

Feedback welcome! More geek tidbits below the fold… Continue reading →

Posted in art, art and tech, Compressionism, creative commons, Links, me, re-blog tidbits, research, stimulus, technology, uncategorical ·

Archives

05 October 2007 by nathaniel

What’s wrong with this picture

Here.
It’s been re-blogged several times already, but I want to re-iterate that Paddy Johnson is really smart. Again. The former link is especially relevant to me, given my recent printmaking adventures, which touch on several kinds of expression and abstraction, through time and performance (among other things)…

Posted in art, Compressionism, pop culture, re-blog tidbits, reviews, stimulus ·
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nathaniel’s books

Interactive Art and Embodiment book cover
Interactive Art and Embodiment: the implicit body as performance

from Amazon.com

Buy Interactive Art for $30 directly from the publisher

Ecological Aesthetics book cover
Ecological Aesthetics: artful tactics for humans, nature, and politics

from Amazon.com

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