Gail Wight

Gail Wight (born 1960, Sunny Valley, Connecticut) is an American new media artist whose work fuses art with biology, neurology, and technology. Some popular media Wight uses to create art include drawing and painting, electronic sculpture, interactive sculpture, video and living mediums.

Gail Wight
Born1960
Sunny Valley, Connecticut
Alma materMassachusetts College of Art and Design,
San Francisco Art Institute
StyleNew Media Art

Early life and education

In 1988 she received her B.F.A. from the Studio for Interrelated Media at the Massachusetts College of Art and Design in Boston, and in 1994 she received an M.F.A. in New Genres from the San Francisco Art Institute.[1][2]

Career

Wight began as a research assistant in 1988 at the Design Lab of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and in 2003 she started her teaching career at Mills College in Oakland, California, as an assistant professor, as well as the director and co-founder of their Intermedia Arts program.[1] She moved to Stanford University, where she is an associate professor in the department of Art and Art History, teaching courses in experimental media arts.

As an artist, she works at the intersection of art and science, especially biology, neuroscience, and the history of technology. She explores, often humorously, how muddled our understanding of life and human relationships can become when we rely too much on science to explain our lives.[3][4] In a 2008 project, Ground Plane, for example, she photographed fossil bones in snowflake-like patterns to create a meditation on both ephemerality and deep time. For her projects, she frequently undertakes short-term informal apprenticeships with scientists, a process she refers to as 'lurking'.[5]

Wight's concentration on scientific and technological elements in her artwork stemmed from a childhood curiosity about a family member's illness that was never talked about. Learning all that she could about contemporary biology prompted her to branch out in her artwork, and today she works with a mix of sculpture, video, interactive media, installations, print, and text.[6] Hydraphilia (2009) is a video installation of the microscopic growth patterns of Physarum polycephalum, better known as slime mold. Wight was inspired to use slime mold because of the organism's naturally beautiful coloration patterns that shift as it reproduces and develops.[7] She created Hydraphilia by videotaping the growth patterns of the slime mold on agar slides, prepared with non-toxic dyes.[7]

Wight has exhibited widely, with solo exhibitions at the Beall Center for Art + Technology (Irvine, California), the Nevada Museum of Art (Reno), and the San Francisco Center for the Book, as well as numerous group exhibitions around the world, including the International Biennial of Contemporary Art Of Seville (Spain), the Natural History Museum (London), and The Physics Room (Christchurch, New Zealand).[1][3]

Exhibitions

Awards and grants

  • Iris F. Litt Award. Clayman Institute, Stanford University, 2007
  • Adaline Kent Award. San Francisco, CA, 2003
  • Anonymous Was A Woman Award. New York, NY, 2002
  • Wallace Gerbode Visual Arts Award. San Francisco, CA, 2001
  • Chauncey McKeever Fine Art Award. San Francisco Art Institute, San Francisco, CA, 1994
  • Jacob K. Javits Fellow. U.S. Department of Education, 1991-1994[1]
gollark: Rust/JS.
gollark: I'm having to redesign a lot of stuff because the existing API was very, very weakly-typed.
gollark: Very soon, we anticipate that it will be possible to create *and* edit pages.
gollark: Minoteaur 8 development continues.
gollark: Minoteaur 8, inevitably.

References

  1. Wight's faculty profile webpage at Stanford University
  2. UC Berkeley Art, Technology and Culture Colloquium webpage (1999)
  3. San Jose Museum of Art website
  4. Rinaldo, Kenneth E. "Integrated Hemispheres: Woman Art and Technology." Leonardo 30.1 (1997): 3-10.
  5. Weidenbaum, Marc. "Gail Wight, Artist of Science". Nature 462, Dec. 3, 2009.
  6. "Patricia Sweetow Gallery" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-10-15. Retrieved 2013-10-15.
  7. Nevada Museum of Art
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.