Lindsay Howard

Lindsay Howard is an American curator, writer, and new media scholar[1] based in New York City whose work explores how the internet is shaping art and culture. She produced the 50th anniversary of the Experiments in Art and Technology program with Nokia Bell Labs and the New Museum.[2] Previously, she curated the inaugural digital art auctions at Phillips in New York, which were called an “art breakthrough"[3] in WIRED Magazine.

Lindsay Howard
NationalityAmerican
Alma materBennington College
OccupationCurator
MovementNet Art, Digital Art, Post-Internet Art, Conceptual Art, Performance Art, Video Art
Websitelindsayhoward.net

Her exhibitions focus on social dynamics and aesthetics within online communities,[4] as well as transparency,[5] hacktivism,[6] and collaborations between artists and technologists.[7]

Education

Howard completed her bachelor's degree[8] in Literature at Bennington College in Bennington, Vermont.[9]

Research and Exhibitions

She started her career[10] by founding the exhibition program at 319 Scholes,[11] an organization and collective of artists,[12] curators,[13] writers,[14] hackers,[15] coders,[16] and activists[17] based in Brooklyn, New York. 319 Scholes focused on digital arts and interdisciplinary explorations of networked culture, especially the role of technology in everyday life,[18] and promoted a “new era of openness and transparency in curatorial practice.”[19] The exhibitions, workshops, and screenings at 319 Scholes contributed to the Net Art and Post-Internet Art movements.[20]

Howard's first exhibition[21] was DUMP.FM IRL which showcased work created by users of DUMP.FM, an image-based chat room for real-time communication[22] cofounded by artist Ryder Ripps. Of the exhibition, critic Paddy Johnson wrote: “The collective picture formed was that of a unique community of makers, each using a lexicon of stock images, internet slang and animated gifs. This is the new art we've been waiting to see for the last 30 years.”[23] Johnson named the exhibition one of the “10 Best Exhibitions of 2010.”[24]

From 2012-2013, Howard was the Curatorial Fellow at Eyebeam Art & Technology Center. While at Eyebeam, Howard curated F.A.T. Gold: Five Years of Free Art & Technology,[25] a retrospective of F.A.T. Lab, an organization that's “part artist collective, part hacktivist cell, and part Silicon Valley think tank."[26] The exhibition presented works from the collective's history as well as new commissions, such as Ideas Worth Spreading by Evan Roth and 3D printed artworks.[27] F.A.T. Lab members, including Addie Wagenknecht, Chris Poole (moot), Geraldine Juárez, Jamie Wilkinson, Jonah Peretti, Becky Stern, and Golan Levin, convened during the exhibition for talks, workshops, and to produce new works.[28] As part of the opening, graffiti artist KATSU tagged Eyebeam's façade with a fire extinguisher, accidentally splashing some of the pigment on Paula Cooper Gallery[29] which was “a perfect example of F.A.T.’s IRL trolling practices.”[30]

During F.A.T. Gold: Five Years of Free Art & Technology, Howard and the artists took journalist Adrian Chen for a ride in a fake Google driverless car, which they whipped 180 degrees in front of the Google Headquarters in Manhattan.[31] The exhibition led cyberpunk author Bruce Sterling to ask, "Why aren’t these violently compassionate art-hackers all in jail?"[32] F.A.T. Gold: Five Years of Free Art & Technology subsequently toured to MU Eindhoven in the Netherlands[33] and Gray Area Foundation for the Arts,[34] where Howard curated a portrait of former Google Chairman Eric Schmidt made out of poop[35] and the artists wheat-pasted memorial posters of Mark Zuckerberg around the Mission District.[36] F.A.T. Lab went to San Francisco to "lament how technology has changed"[37] and "celebrate the victory of government and commercial hegemony over the internet and the total loss of personal freedom and privacy";[38] the group disbanded following the exhibition at Gray Area.[39][40]

Howard curated Paddles ON![41] at Phillips,[42] the inaugural digital art sales at a major international auction house.[43] The auctions focused on artists who have pioneered innovative monetization models that reflect the democratic values of the internet generation.[44][45] Paddles ON! featured the first art website to ever be auctioned:[46] digital artist Rafaël Rozendaal's ifnoyes.com, which sold for $3,500 using the Art Website Sales Contract.[47][48] Artist Petra Cortright used a view-based algorithm to price her video work, which resulted in her 24-second YouTube film selling for $3,200.[49][50] Artist Molly Soda sold a YouTube webcam performance for $1,500.[51][52][53] The New York Times wrote: “Digital art has become an accepted part of every biennial and international art fair, but the form is still the punk rock of the art world."[54]

Howard established an online commissioning program[55][56] where she worked with artists Shia Labeouf,[57] Sougwen Chung,[58] Eilis McDonald,[59] Alexandra Gorczynski,[60] Morehshin Allahyari,[61] and Jacob Ciocci.[62]

In 2016, Howard released a body of research called Temporary Highs,[63][64] which looks at how the structure of the internet enables reward-seeking behavior in a compulsive cycle of oversharing and consumption.[65] Howard's writings examine the pleasure and anxiety of immediate gratification, as well as the constant search for validation, understanding, and connection.[66] She presented Temporary Highs at SAIC,[67] Oberlin College & Conservatory,[68] and PNCA.[69]

In 2017, the New Museum invited Howard to produce the 50th anniversary of Experiments in Art and Technology program with Nokia Bell Labs.[70] Howard worked with artists Sougwen Chung[71] and Lisa Park[72] as they collaborated with engineers to create large-scale art installations using Bell Labs' Motion Engine, which offers a way to visually analyze complex natural and manmade systems, as well as Bell Labs' advanced research into sensor technology.[73][74]

Affiliations

Howard is a founding member of Deep Lab,[75] a feminist collective of researchers examining how privacy, security, surveillance, anonymity and large-scale data aggregation are problematized in the arts, culture and society, along with Addie Wagenknecht, Kate Crawford, Claire L. Evans, Simone Browne, and Jillian York.[76][77][78][79] She curated an exhibition of Deep Lab's work and a series of public programming at the New Museum in 2015.[80][81][82]

In 2016, Howard served on the selection committee for Creative Capital’s Emerging Fields award.[83]

gollark: Unless you count the hardcoded digits of Tau.
gollark: PotatOS is several thousand lines of cryptic incomprehensible code and doesn't include trigonometry anywhere!
gollark: No use randomly writing mathematical code for a random platform when I have no idea what to do with it.
gollark: I don't see why I would want that, and that's not listed, but I imagine you could implement it.
gollark: <@201096871341588480> Actually, I might as well just link you the docs, this lists all the stuff it can do in MicroPython: https://microbit-micropython.readthedocs.io/en/v1.0.1/microbit_micropython_api.html

See also

Exhibitions

  • New Theories in VR, New Lab[84]
  • The Barn Show: Unquestionable Optimism, Johannes Vogt Gallery[85]
  • Temporary Highs, bitforms, SAIC, PNCA[86]
  • Deep Lab, New Museum[87]
  • F.A.T. GOLD: Five Years of Free Art & Technology, Eyebeam,[88] MU Eindhoven,[89] Gray Area Foundation for the Arts[90]
  • Paddles ON: Digital Art Auction, Phillips (London)[91]
  • Paddles ON: Digital Art Auction, Phillips (New York)[92]
  • Pattern Recognition, Dazed & Confused Magazine[93]
  • Eyebeam Resurfaces: The Future of the Digital Archive, Eyebeam[94]
  • C.R.E.A.M., Art Micro Patronage[95]
  • WALLPAPERS: Sara Ludy and Nicolas Sassoon, 319 Scholes[96]
  • Awareness of Everything, Internet Garage[97]
  • Art Hack Day: God Mode, 319 Scholes[98]
  • Blip Festival Gallery, Eyebeam[99]
  • Getting Closer, Fe Arts Gallery[100]
  • Dump.FM IRL, 319 Scholes[101]
  • Alexandra Gorczynski and Duncan Malashock, 319 Scholes[102]

Writings

  • Room for Space: an interview with Nicholas O'Brien, Keen On Magazine (July 2018)[103]
  • Petra Cortright on having the confidence to create anything you want, The Creative Independent (May 2018)[104]
  • Inventing the Future: Art and Technology, Art21 (October 2017)[105]
  • The Presentation of Self: Interview with LaTurbo Avedon, Keen On Magazine (October 2017)[106]
  • A Prankster-Turned-Painter Leaves Self-Sabotage Behind, Hyperallergic (November 2016)[107]
  • Alternative Paradise: Marc Horowitz, Keen On Magazine (November 2016)[108]
  • Leaders of the New Media Pack, CULTURED Magazine (February 2016)[109]
  • Artist Profile: Heather Phillipson, Rhizome (July 2014)[110]
  • Artist Profile: Michael Manning, Rhizome (April 2014)[111]
  • The Way We Share: Transparency in Curatorial Practice, Hyperallergic (March 2013)[112]
  • Awareness of Everything, Aram Bartholl: Speed Book published by Gestalten (January 2012)

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