Collections, Obsessions, and the Display of the Other.

Faculty: Mary Ting

Description:

The collection, documentation, study and display of other creatures, cultures, and objects dates back to earliest civilizations. This tradition continues today in an updated interactive look. Within contemporary art, the critique of the institution both as content and form has become a well-established trend.

The workshop will combine presentations of historical and contemporary models with daily hands on activities suitable for all art forms. Historical models such as wonder cabinets, medical libraries, natural history museums will be examined for their cultural and political significance and the ongoing obsessive desire for the consumption of other cultures and life forms. Contemporary examples that mimic, comment, subvert and utilize these systems and display methods will also be presented. Students will discuss and examine these models, systems, research, and create a work specific to their medium and interests.

Goals:

Via examination of historical models and contemporary examples, participants will develop their own inventory and angle of inquiry.

Filed under: 2008 Workshops

Dynamic Neuro-Facial Dis-Association

The internet is a complex media, everything in it turn into tangible realities that make it possible to turn crime and sabotage into identities dis-associations. The fake is more real than real and so is the result of this combination.

Filed under: 2008 Workshops