Jenny Marketou

Jenny Marketou (Athens, 1954) is a Greek multidisciplinary artist, lecturer, and author noted for her interventions and technology based projects.[1]

Jenny Marketou
Born1954
NationalityGreek
Alma materPratt Institute, NY
Known forMultidisciplinary art
Notable work
videos, photography, public interventions, web projects, video installation
Movementnet.art
Websitehttp://www.jennymarketou.com

Biography

Jenny Marketou born in Athens, was educated in the United States and lives and works in New York.[2] She attended the Corcoran School of Art in Washington D.C. where she studied sculpture and photography for her BFA, and earned her MFA at the Pratt Institute in New York City. Marketou has taught at the Cooper Union School of Art, The New School for Social Research[3] and at CALARTS.[4] She has received numerous international residencies, grants, and awards, as well as lectured, exhibited, and curated worldwide.[3]

Artistic career

Marketou's format spans performance, video, photography, interventions and internet projects. Her topics include the body and identity, public space, surveillance and hacktivism. Marketou defines "hacktivism" as "reconstructing a tool to understand its workings and to reconstruct it in a personal, creative way."[5] In 1998, Marketou attended a three-month artist residency at Banff, where she met various artists associated with the net art movement. These meetings have influenced her work since that date.[2] Streaming Raw includes video streamed in "real time" from two spy cameras in the Twin Towers prior to their destruction.[6] In 2002, she participated in curating the show, "Open_Source_Art_Hack," at the New Museum.[7] Marketou developed an interactive "smell map" that participants could create at the University of Pennsylvania's Science Center's show, "Odor Limits" in 2008.[8] The map was called Smell It: A Do-It-Yourself Smell Map (2008) and it recorded the "shifting of the neighborhood's smellscape from one day to the next."[9]

Selected artworks

  • 1998 SmellBytes, internet based installation.[3]
  • 2001 Taystes.net, internet art.[10]
  • 2011 Paperophanies, a participatory performance at Artium Museum in Vitoria.[1]
  • 2012 Sunspotting, A Walking Forest. Intervention performance.[1]
  • 2013 Undoing Monuments, Hybrid participatory intervention.[11]

Videos

gollark: If they run that whole cycle fast enough it'll average out as a reasonable situation!
gollark: Outside of high-level stuff (GCSE *maybe*, probably A-level) I think it's *mostly* irrelevant if you take a few weeks off.
gollark: I mean, you can socialize at school, which is important, but you can do that anyway.
gollark: It annoys me that the government goes on about how amazingly important it is and how it would be unethical to make people not go to school for a bit.
gollark: Probably people with compromised immune systems or something should avoid school.

References

  1. "Jenny Marketou". Art Up!. Retrieved 29 March 2016.
  2. Kotretsos, Georgia (28 October 2011). "Inside the Artist's Studio: Jenny Marketou". Art 21 Magazine. Retrieved 29 March 2016.
  3. "bio: Jenny Marketou". CTRL [SPACE]. Archived from the original on 8 September 2015. Retrieved 29 March 2016.
  4. CALARTS 2015 visiting faculty
  5. Poremba, Cindy. "Beyond Boy's Toys: Women, Play and MindStorms Robotics". CiteSeerX 10.1.1.83.8552. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  6. Wasilewski, Marek (January 2004). "Art as Transporter". PAJ: A Journal of Performance and Art. 26 (1): 100–102. doi:10.1162/152028104772624991. JSTOR 3246448.
  7. Greene, Rachel (1 May 2002). "Do You Copy? (Internet Art)". ArtForum International. Archived from the original on 4 May 2016. Retrieved 29 March 2016 via HighBeam Research.
  8. Butman, Jeremy (21 May 2008). "Odor Limits". Philadelphia Weekly. Archived from the original on 5 May 2016. Retrieved 29 March 2016 via HighBeam Research.
  9. Paraguai, Luisa (2012-05-17). "Spatialities and scents: Chemical and cultural dialogues". Technoetic Arts. 9 (2–3): 171–179. doi:10.1386/tear.9.2-3.171_1.
  10. "Taystes.net, the instinct to spy". Neural. 15 November 2001. Retrieved 29 March 2016.
  11. Κατερίνα, ΚΩΝΣΤΑΝΤΙΝΟΣ (10 March 2013). "Home/s στο Goethe-Institut Athen". Athens Voice (in Greek). Retrieved 29 March 2016.
  12. Mansfield, Susan (7 February 2013). "Visual Art Review: Douple Dip of Expression". The Scotsman. Archived from the original on 18 November 2018. Retrieved 29 March 2016 via HighBeam Research.
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