Erwin Redl

Erwin Redl (born 1963) in Gföhl, Lower Austria is an Austrian-born artist currently living in the United States. As artistic medium he uses LEDs. His work includes installations, videos, graphics, computerart and electronic music.

Life and work

Redl studied electronic music and composition at the University of Music and Performing Arts, Vienna. Then he moved to New York City, where he studied Computer Art at the School of Visual Arts, he graduated in 1995. With his artwork Matrix VI he lit the face of the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York during the Whitney Biennial 2002. His works, some of them are named Matrix, were shown in New York, Germany, France, Austria and Korea. The installation called Fade I allow visitors to move into lit spaces. This installation was shown in Lille, France, as part of Lille 2004 (fr) - European Capital of Culture where it animated the Eglise Sainte-Marie Madeleine (fr). Erwin Redl's Nocturnal Flow has been installed in the Paul G. Allen Center. The artwork, an 85-foot brick column at the west end of the atrium, was chosen by the Washington State Arts Commission. It was supported by the Washington State's Art in Public Places Program.

Erwin Redl lives and works in New York.

Public Collections

  • ACE GALLERY Los Angeles,
  • C3 Budapest, Budapest, Hungary[1]
  • Niederösterreichisches Landesmuseum, St. Pölten, Austria[2]
gollark: ... it's saying what you can do with the (copyrighted) code.
gollark: It's *basically* a license in spirit.
gollark: Why is the entire first screen of it just a bizarre custom license?
gollark: Speaking of that, did you know the E-ink Kindle devices actually run a weird Linux distribution which is *also* very insecure?
gollark: I *honestly* think I could probably do a better job, although maybe they somehow can't fit security or sane programming into the resource-constrained environment.

References

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