Austin Museum of Digital Art

Austin Museum of Digital Art

The Austin Museum of Digital Art (AMODA), located in Austin, Texas, is the first museum dedicated exclusively to the display of digital art. AMODA was founded in 1997 by Harold Chaput, Samantha Krukowski and Chris Rankin in response to the abundance of digital art in the local scene and the absence of venues for such art. AMODA has not only presented local artwork, but has brought digital art and digital artists from around the globe to Austin. By putting local and global works and acts next to each other, AMODA has contributed to the already growing digital art and music scene in Austin, while gaining recognition around the world as an important museum that has shaped the definition of digital art.

History

The Austin Museum of Digital Art is the brainchild of two graduate students from the University of Texas at Austin: Harold Chaput, then a Computer Sciences doctoral student at the UT, and Chris Rankin, a graduate of UT Austin's Art History department. Rankin was dissatisfied with the state of contemporary art collections in Texas and in the US generally. Chaput was connected to many artists and musicians employed in high tech positions who were looking for a creative outlet. They realized that by tapping into the local creative community and connecting them to the finest contemporary art, they could create a community where art could be shown, discussed, debated and created.

They joined up with Samantha Krukowski, an influential member of UT's communications department. The three of them swiftly settled on a subsection of contemporary art that used computers in some form, and coined the term Digital Art to describe it. They also agreed that the new organization should be a museum rather than a collective or a gallery, placing the emphasis on artistry and aesthetics rather than fashion and popularity. Thus the Austin Museum of Digital Art was founded in November 1997.

Shortly after its founding, Rankin left AMODA because his new job working for the Texas Commission on the Arts posed a conflict of interest. Krukowski also left to become a Professor of Communications at UT. Rankin and Krukowski were replaced Kyle Anderson, Jennifer Potter, Joel Stearns and Robert Turknett. Together with Chaput, this board moved AMODA from a museum on paper to an art institution. They created AMODA's programs, including an educational program (2000), the Digital Showcase (2001), an exhibition series (2002), and a performance series (2003).

Defining Digital Art

AMODA defines Digital Art as art that uses digital technology in one of three ways: product, process or subject.

Art that uses digital technology as the product can be considered digital art. This includes categories like "web art" or "demo art." This is the most recognized definition of digital art.

Art that uses digital technology in the process of creation can also be considered digital art. The drawings of Harold Cohen's AARON are digital art because a computer program was used to generate the works, even though the final product is ink on paper. Computer graphics on film, digital music, and the Cyberopera are all good examples of digital art as process.

Finally, digital art that references digital art as its subject can also be considered digital art. A series of oil paintings showing a man connected to an online chat room could be categorized as digital art, even though digital technology was never used in the creation or display of the work.

The central theme for all three approaches is: art that could not have been created without digital technology. All three address different facets of digital art, from presentation to technique to sociology, all of which are important to the history of art.

Programming

AMODA's programming was designed to be accessible without being condescending. It was unique in its ability to draw a younger audience than other museums and galleries could. AMODA's programs were integrated with the community and attracted a new population of art patrons through its non-traditional but high-quality presentation of digital art.

AMODA's most popular and successful programs were its Exhibition Series and Digital Showcase.

Digital Showcase

The AMODA Digital Showcase is a monthly evening of digital art and music. Under the strict direction of Todd Simmons, a performance space is filled with digital art installations, and four to six digital music performances are shown throughout the evening.

The intention of the Digital Showcase is to show digital art "in situ". While an exhibition removes art from its natural environment and displays it for isolated examination, the Digital Showcase lets the different art installations and music performances bleed over each other. The result is an immersive art experience where the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. It is also wildly popular. Attendance is consistently in the hundreds, and the performances have been written up internationally.

External links and references

[http://www.amoda.org AMODA Web Site]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно сделать НИР?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Digital art — Irrationnal Geometrics digital art installation 2008 by Pascal Dombis A close up of th …   Wikipedia

  • Digital Writing and Research Lab — Director of the DWRL, Diane Davis, with guest speaker Gregory Ulmer DWRL staffer …   Wikipedia

  • Digital Scriptorium — Leaf from a Gradual, c, 1450 1475, Italy; New York, Columbia University, Plimpton MS 040A Gl …   Wikipedia

  • John C. Austin — Infobox Architect name=John C. Austin mother= father= nationality= American birth date=birth date|1870|2|13 birth place= Bodicote, Oxfordshire, England death date=death date|1963|9|3 death place= Pasadena, California significant… …   Wikipedia

  • National Association of Schools of Art and Design — The National Association of Schools of Art and Design (NASAD), founded in 1944, is an accrediting organization of colleges, schools and universities in the United States. The organization establishes standards for graduate and undergraduate… …   Wikipedia

  • Alex Sedano — Infobox musical artist Name = Alex Sedano Img capt = Alex Sedano, London 2008 Background = non vocal instrumentalist Birth name = Alejandro Sedano Martinez Born = birth date and age|1978|11|13 Granada, Spain Died = Origin = Granada, Spain… …   Wikipedia

  • John Vega — is a digital artist and designer living in Boulder, Colorado. A 20 year veteran of commercial new media, Vega is an award winning interactive art director and motion graphics designer. His career clients comprise Fortune 500 companies such as… …   Wikipedia

  • Keep Adding — is an artist group formed in the year 2001.Keep Adding creates environments that address space, context, and site. These spaces are not simply the cube of a gallery or an abandoned house – they are the sites of complete sensory experiences. Keep… …   Wikipedia

  • Pleix — Créé en 2001, Pleix est un collectif de sept artistes parisiens, infographistes, graphistes musiciens alternant réalisation de travaux alimentaires tels que des clips vidéos et des publicités avec une recherche esthétique et plastique personnelle …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Sean O’Neal — Sean O Neal (born around 1974 in Philadelphia, PA) is a US electronic music DJ, composer, musician, producer and music journalist. He is co founder of several indie record labels, including Tuning Spork Records, Fuzzy Box Records, Foundsound… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”