El Super Turista

Stencil Print 2005

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El Super Turista

    Exhibición Stencil, Estudio Cruz de Piedra, Oaxaca, Mexico 2005
When I was in Oaxaco I was fortunate to meet Viktor Diaz and the Bemba Klan at the Estudio Cruz de Piedra gallery. They invited me to make a piece for one of their stencil shows, and I got to work and exhibit alongside many of the best young street artists in Oaxaca. I created this piece that expressed ironically my role as an outsider and satirized the many foreign tourists who throng the city.
A year later, during the people’s resistance movement that exploded in Oaxaca in response to brutal suppression of a teacher’s strike, the public artwork created by these stencil artists became one of the most visible manifestations of the struggle. I am honored to have shared a (quieter) moment of cultural exchange with them.
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It Was A Very Good Year

Stencil Print 2005

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It Was A Very Good Year

Paper Politics is a major exhibition of politically and socially engaged printmaking. The exhibit showcases print art which uses themes of social justice and global equity to engage community members in political conversation. The show has been displayed at venues throughout the country and in Canada’s biggest political art show ever, and continues to travel. 

The exhibition features work by over 200 artists from the US and around the world. It is curated by Josh MacPhee, a Troy, NY-based artist, activist and author, most recently of Stencil Pirates: A Global Study of the Street Stencil.

Paper Politics presents a breathtaking tour of the many modalities of printing: relief, intaglio, lithography, silkscreen, collagraph, monotype, photography. In addition to these techniques, we are delighted to include in the show finely crafted stencils and street printing, traditional media used to convey political thought.

The show’s organizing method draws upon do-it-yourself culture, and like a band on tour, it travels becoming a networking device that connects different artists and communities who were previously unaware of each other’s work.

- www.justseeds.org

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Git Your Hands Up!

Stencil Print 2005

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Git Your Hands Up!

The degree to which you resist is the degree to which you are free, sings activist and war veteran Utah Phillips. In this spirit, on January 20th, Chicago artists, writers, performers, activists, and concerned citizens will gather to launch four more years of resistance on the day that George W. Bush delivers his second inaugural address.

The evening will begin with a candle-light procession departing from Wicker Park at 7:30 p.m. from the intersection of Damen and Wicker Park Avenue and arriving at ACME Artworks at 8 p.m. From 8 pm to 1 am, the event will continue at ACME Artworks.

At the gallery, visitors will browse film screenings and artwork by more than 30 local and national talents. . .

People of all ages are invited to attend this thought-provoking gathering, which will feature a chorus of diverse voices and ideas. A local alternative to the Washington D.C.-based Counter Inauguration, the event also will serve as a forum for citizens to unite, speak out, network, and explore different creative avenues of resistance.

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Displacement Zoetrope

Portable Interactive Installation 2004

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Displacement Zoetrope

In 2004 I became part of the art collective Tactonic, joining Huong Ngo and Matthew Steinke. The group’s work combined recycled materials, the love of low-technology, and an interest in social interactions. Our collaboration culminated in the PORTOTONIC exhibition, a collection of portable artworks highlighting themes of travel, displacement, and nomadism.

My own piece took the work I had been doing with looped video micro-narratives, and adapted that idea to a distinctly low-tech approach. I built a Zoetrope, an early animation device, which was housed in a vintage child’s suitcase, and created a series of looping animated sequences to be played back using it. Each animation strip focused on displaced people in the midst of difficult transition – deported Jews in the Holocaust, arrested Mexican border crossers, Haitian boat people. The ‘peepshow curiosity’ aspect of the Zoetrope contrasted with the seriousness of the subject matter, calling attention to the relationship between the detached voyeurism of the viewers and the plight of the subjects depicted.

Press clipping

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TV – It Gets the Job Done Right

Autonomous Video Installation 2004

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TV – It Gets the Job Done Right

    SAIC MFA Exhibition, Gallery 2, Chicago, IL 2004
In this installation live broadcast TV programs on 11 televisions are continuously remixed into a rhythmic, stroboscopic composition. It functions automatically, cycling among preprogrammed patterns, yet with a strong element of indeterminacy due to the unpredictable content.

This piece manifests the attraction/ repulsion relationship I have with TV. It provides a hyper-stimulating barrage of fast-paced images and sounds, yet frustrates attempts to actually ‘watch’ it in a conventional sense.

Created as the culmination of my MFA in Art & Technology, this electronic installation is run by a MAX/MSP/Jitter patch that both outputs video samples and talks to a PIC microcontroller. The PIC is programmed in C with my rhythmic pattern algorithms and controls custom video switching electronics.

TV - It Gets the Job Done Right

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Duet For Alto & Tenor Televisions

Multimedia Performance with Electronic Instrument 2003

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Duet For Alto & Tenor Televisions

Duet for Alto and Tenor Televisions is a performance piece using an electronic video/music instrument of my own design. In the improvised performance, tiny snippets of historical found footage are obsessively re-examined and remixed into a live sonic and visual collage. Shifting loops intensify the grain of the voice and image, the micro-gestures of the filmed subjects, and the rhythms that fall into and out of phase as the material is dynamically recombined.

The analog synth-inspired instrument consists of a custom hardware controller interface containing a usb joystick control board wired to a variety of knobs and button banks, as well as a pair of mini lcd screens and digital-analog video scan converters. The interface is connected to a Max/MSP/Jitter software application I built, which contains video and audio sampling, triggering, and effects modules.

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Britton Bertran did an interview with me about this project for the now-defunct Panel House art criticism website.

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Joyful Noise Tank

Interactive Video Installation 2003

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Joyful Noise Tank

In collaboration with Matt Steinke


Video Documentation
Joyful Noise Tank is an interactive installation that combines elements of video games, virtual reality, biomedical imaging, telepresence, and puppet theater. It is a work of interactive cinema in which viewer/performers explore a self-contained video environment, manipulating a miniature camera probe to navigate through an interconnected series of visual and sonic spaces.

Joyful Noise Tank was created for the show Anti-Spacesuit – The Dirty Future at Gallery 2 in Chicago.

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Unnatural Geographic

Interactive Animation Installation 1999

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Unnatural Geographic

In collaboration with Miguel Barbosa, Johnny Chang, Luis Duron, Erina Fukumoto, Roderick Portales, and Tameka Wallace

    ZEUM, San Francisco, CA 1999-2000
After working to help open Zeum, San Francisco’s Art and Technology center for youth, I was offered the opportunity to be their Artist-In-Residence for a season.

For my residency, I taught a 3D modeling and animation workshop to a group of talented teens. The students and I invented, modeled, and animated a menagerie of otherworldly characters. I then created an ambitious interactive six-screen surround presentation, complete with futuristic control console and multi-channel soundtrack, in Zeum’s Media Cone.

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